Can a dog have a mental disability
Is Your Dog Retarded or Mentally Challenged?
This article has been reviewed in accordance with our editorial policy.
The information in this article is not a substitute for professional help.
If youre anything like the average, loving dog owner, you keep a very watchful eye on your pup at all times. You know their patterns, quirks, and idiosyncrasies. Nothing they do ever slides past you!
What if I told you that despite your familiarity with your dog, something may still be hiding in plain sight? You may be missing something due to the sheer fact you dont realize that its a thing you even need to look for.
You can pick up on obvious signs that your dog may be sick or in pain, but did you know your dog may be struggling mentally?
Mental retardation in dogs can manifest as blank stares, lack of learning commands, and slow response time, among others. Dogs can also be autistic or suffer from other mental disorders such as separation anxiety, depression, and PTSD. A more certain diagnosis for such conditions is best made by a professional vet.
In this article, I will explore the topic of dogs having special needs. I will also give you signs to spot if your dog may have a mental disability and wrap things up by giving you tips on training a mentally challenged dog.
Ready to learn things about your dog that go far beyond what the eye can see?
Come with me!
Table of Contents
Like humans, dogs can absolutely be special needs! As defined by Merriam Webster, special needs is any of various difficulties (such as a physical, emotional, behavioral, or learning disability or impairment) that causes an individual to require additional or specialized services or accommodations (such as in education or recreation).
If your dog is special needs, they arent an outcast or a liability. Instead, a special needs dog will just require a little more of your time, effort, and attention. You will likely have to make special adjustments to care for them in a way that caters to their individual circumstances.
Theres no doubt that a special needs dog may take a little more patience. They will also challenge you to learn different ways of doing things. Once you get the hang of the adjustments you need to make for your pup, their differences will likely turn into a normal part of daily life.
Some people even intentionally seek out special needs dogs so they can be the ones to go the extra mile for them. It can be rewarding to take the time that others may not be able or want to spend and lavish it on a sweet puppy that needs some added care.
It can be hard to tell if your dog has a mental disability. One way to figure this out is to observe your dog. Are they moving differently? Are they acting or behaving in a way that is out of character for them?
If so, they could be showing new signs of a mental disability. However, their behavior could also be attributed to many other things. For that reason, I recommend having your vet evaluate your dog to get to the root cause of any symptoms you are seeing.
To give you an idea of what to be on the lookout for, here are a few mental disabilities your dog may be experiencing, along with the signs keep an eye on:
- Can be with your dog since birth or can progress as they get older.
- Mental retardation in dogs is similar to mental retardation in humans. Still, it is harder to diagnose since dogs cant speak.
- Symptoms: blank stare, lack of learning commands, slow response time, etc.
- Canine Autism is still not a concrete diagnosis, but there is mounting research to support that dogs can have autism.
- For a tentative autism diagnosis, a dog should show poor socialization and unconventional, repetitive behaviors.
- Symptoms: tail-chasing, aggression, trance-like states, bent towards phobias, and more.
- Usually happens when dogs are separated from their owner.
- Can begin as boredom and amplify into a full-blown panic.
- Symptoms: Chewing and destroying household items, incessant barking, crying, etc.
- Can happen after the loss of another pet or family member or change to their routine.
- Isnt the same as Clinical Depression that humans can face but has similar symptoms.
- Symptoms: Loss of appetite, lethargy, and even hair loss, amongst other signs.
- Develops as a result of being exposed to a very traumatic situation.
- May be triggered if placed in the same or similar environment where trauma took place.
- Symptoms: aggression, shivering, intense efforts to flee the location, barking, and more.
Mentally challenged dogs need training not just to correct problem behaviors but also to manage their mental health. Here are just a few basic pointers for training your mentally challenged dog:
The searching game helps exercise your dogs brain and works to enhance their sense of smell.
To play, allow your dog to smell a treat or a bone and then place it in different parts of the house. Then, encourage your dog to search for and find it.
*Bonus: If your dog needs extra help getting around, you can use a head collar or head halter to lead them. You can train your dog to get used to these devices by using the commands stop and stay as you walk them.
You dont want your dog to get overwhelmed or dread their training sessions. It is most effective to keep mentally challenged dogs training sessions short, consistent and impactful.
When youre training your mentally challenged dog, you will likely find they dont perform like other dogs. Thats okay; theyre not supposed to! I encourage you to allow your dog to move at their own pace. Praise each of their victories, no matter how small they may seem.
You may have never thought that a dog could actually be retarded or mentally challenged. But, now that you know, maybe you believe that having a dog with any kind of special needs may be too difficult.
Perhaps it seems like its not even worth the effort.
To be realistic, a special needs or mentally challenged dog will likely require a lot more from an owner than a regular dog.
There is another way to look at this, though.
Parenting a mentally challenged dog can be an invitation to you to step into deeper levels of love on a daily basis.
Caring for a mentally challenged dog may help you to grow in compassion, presence, and tolerance.
The extra gentleness you practice with your dog may even extend to yourself. Accommodating their needs may, in turn, make you more forgiving of your own difficulties and imperfections.
As it often goes, you may think you set out to change your mentally challenged dogs life for the better. But at the end of the day, they actually end up invading your life with a love you never knew was possible.
What Disabilities Qualify for a Service Dog? - A Complete Guide
What Disabilities Qualify for a Service Dog?
People with a wide range of physical and mental health disabilities can benefit from service dogs.
Mental Disabilities
You may qualify for a mental health service dog if you have a diagnosed mental health condition, such as:
- Generalized anxiety disorder
- Panic disorder
- Social anxiety disorder
- Separation anxiety disorder
- Depression
- Bipolar disorder
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- Schizophrenia
- Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
A licensed mental health professional must diagnose you with a mental health disorder and specify how your condition interferes with at least one aspect of your life before you can qualify for a psychiatric service dog.
Physical Disabilities
Many people with physical disabilities can also benefit from service dogs. The following are some of the most well-known conditions that service dogs assist with:
- Arthritis
- Cerebral palsy
- Chronic fatigue or pain
- Diabetes
- Epilepsy and other seizure disorders
- Multiple sclerosis
- Muscular dystrophy
- Narcolepsy
- Spinal cord injuries
- Stroke
- Vertigo
A physician or another professional can help you decide if a service dog will benefit you and what specific tasks they can perform. They can also offer resources to help you obtain a service dog.
Types of Service Dogs
Several types of service dogs are specialized to assist with a variety of mental or physical disabilities. The type of service dog you get will be heavily dependent on your specific needs. Here is a list of the most common types of service dogs:
- Psychiatric Service Dogs: These dogs focus on helping individuals living with mental health disorders including depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), bipolar disorder, and more.
- Physical Disability and Mobility Assistance Dogs: This type of service dog is trained to support individuals with physical disabilities or mobility issues. Helpful tasks range from retrieving and picking up items, opening doors, stabilizing balance issues or dizziness, and much more.
- Guide Dogs: Visually impaired or blind individuals rely on these canine companions to see the world around and ahead of them. They help navigate city streets, assist with climbing and descending stairs, and provide protection.
- Hearing Dogs: Much like guide dogs, these assistance animals help the deaf and hearing impaired by alerting them to important sounds, such as doorbells, alarms, or intruders.
- Diabetic Alert Dogs: These professional pups are trained to sense sudden peaks or drops in their owners blood sugar, fetch insulin, or contact emergency services.
- Seizure Alert/Response Dogs: For people living with epilepsy or otherwise experiencing seizures, these dogs can sense the imminent onset of an issue before their humans. They also intervene in cases of emergency and contact help from neighbors or using a special device.
- Autism Support Dogs: Both adults and children who are on the autism spectrum can benefit from the mental and emotional support that these dogs provide. The sheer joy and companionship can create an unbreakable bond, making life easier in many ways.
What Tasks Can a Service Dog Perform?
Whether you have a psychiatric service dog, a physical guide dog, or a medical assistance animal, it can be trained to perform a myriad of tasks, including:
- Fetch important medications: These can range from mental health meds, insulin, heart medication and more.
- Provide emergency assistance: In the case of a crisis, such as a seizure or collapse, service dogs can respond by intervening, providing essential attention, and contacting emergency services.
- Harmful behavior intervention: For people struggling with mental and emotional health issues, a service dog can interrupt destructive actions or behavior, including physical self-harm, suicidal ideation, or drug use/overdose.
- Navigating public life: Service dogs help individuals with impaired vision or hearing, physical disabilities, or mobility issues get around in public, navigate crosswalks, and interact with other people.
How Does a Service Dog Help Their Handler?
Service dogs perform a wide range of tasks for their handlers. The following are some of the most well-known service dog tasks they may carry out:
Physical Support
Service dogs provide numerous physical support tasks for those with limited mobility such as those in wheelchairs or those who use walkers and other assistive devices. Examples of physical support tasks include:
- Opening and closing doors
- Turning lights on and off
- Picking up objects off the ground
- Retrieving items from different locations
- Providing balance assistance as the owner transitions from their wheelchair to another position
- Unloading laundry from the dryer
- Paying cashiers
- Pressing buttons (elevator buttons, handicapped accessible buttons, etc.)
Seizure Support
People with epilepsy and other seizure disorders can benefit from service dogs. These dogs may perform the following tasks:
- Alerting owners before a seizure occurs so they can get somewhere safe
- Seeking additional help after the episode is over
- Lying close to the person having the attack or positioning themselves under the persons head
Diabetes Support
A service dog can help people with diabetes know when their blood sugar levels have changed so they can administer an injection or take the appropriate medication. They can also be trained to retrieve a phone or use a dog-friendly telephone to call an ambulance or someone else who can provide help.
Guide Dogs
Guide dogs help those who are blind or have impaired vision. They act as their owners eyes and guide them through public places, making sure they can cross the street safely, navigate stores and other locations, etc.
Hearing Dogs
Hearing dogs assist deaf and hard-of-hearing people. They respond to specific audio cues and alert their owner. For example, they might let them know that someone rang the doorbell or that a fire alarm is going off.
Psychiatric Support
Psychiatric service dogs can retrieve medication and call for help, just like service dogs trained to help those with physical disabilities. They can also provide deep pressure therapy and tactile stimulation (licking the owners hand or face to help them calm down).
Psychiatric service dogs often perform crowd-control tasks, too. They may circle their owner to keep people from getting too close or lay down in front of the owner to act as a barrier.
What Is a Service Dog?
A service dog is defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as a dog of any size or breed that performs a particular task for someone with a disability (physical or mental health-related).
The ADA offers service dogs specific protections and privileges that other dogs (including emotional support animals) do not get.
For example, service dogs can accompany their owners into restaurants, stores, and other public places. They can also fly with their owners on airplanes and are permitted in apartment buildings that dont allow pets.
How to Qualify for a Service Dog?
To qualify for a service dog, you must have either a mental or physical disability that interferes with at least one aspect of your life that the animal can help to alleviate. You may also need to get an official diagnosis from a healthcare provider (such as a physician or licensed therapist).
What Documentation Do I Need for a Service Dog?
It might come as a surprise to learn that you dont need any type of official documentation, identification, or registration to have a service dog. Legally, the dog must be trained to perform tasks specific to your disability, but beyond that, documentation is useful but not required. It may help to keep documentation from your health provider indicating that you need your service dog for specific reasons. Also, proof of training is typically needed in air travel situations.
Do I Need to Register My Service Dog?
Despite what some companies assert, there is no official federal or state registration for service dogs or emotional support animals. Your service dog is not required to wear a special vest or carry an ID card to accompany you, either. Any company or organization attempting to sell you such products or services is peddling unnecessary goods.
How to Get a Service Dog
There are a few ways one can go about getting a service dog. They may purchase a puppy bred specifically for service dog tasks, or they may buy or adopt a puppy or older dog.
For a dog to act as a service dog, it must go through extensive training to ensure it can reliably perform a particular behavior whenever its owner needs their support.
The following are some of the most common options for getting and training a service dog:
Online Service Dog Training
During online service dog training, an owner and their dog will work with a trainer remotely, communicating via phone and video chat. During the training program, the trainer will observe the dog and help the owner teach them specific tasks related to the owners disability and unique needs.
In-Person Service Dog Training
In-person service dog training, as the name suggests, takes place in person. The trainer might come to the dog owners house or ask the owner to come to them at a training facility or another location.
Purchase a Trained Service Dog
Purchasing a trained service dog is the most expensive option. However, it also reduces the amount of training the dog owner has to do.
Of course, the owner must continuously work with the dog to build a relationship and ensure the dog can consistently perform specific tasks. Still, the dog will have already mastered the basics beforehand.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) provides a wide array of protections from discrimination against disabled individuals in public, at work, in housing, and beyond. As a powerful federal law, the ADA permits service dogs to accompany their owners in public accommodations, such as restaurants, shopping centers, medical facilities, government buildings, and more. It also prohibits housing providers and landlords from discriminating against disabled individuals and their service dogs as well as emotional support animals, which are otherwise not covered.
Emotional Support Animals vs. Service Dogs
An emotional support animal or ESA is different from a service dog. ESAs provide their owners with comfort and support during stressful times. However, its their presence that is comforting and supportive, rather than any specific tasks they perform.
Since ESAs dont go through the same rigorous training as service dogs, they dont have the same privileges and protections. For example, ESAs arent allowed in as many public places, such as certain stores and restaurants.
However, with the proper documentation, ESAs can stay with owners in apartments that dont typically allow animals. They may also be allowed to fly in the airplane cabin with their owner instead of being stowed in the cargo area.
Online Psychiatric Service Dog Training with Pettable
If youre interested in online service dog training, Pettable can help. We offer online psychiatric service dog training with licensed professionals. Get in touch today to learn more.
04/03/2024 Update: Article was reviewed for accuracy by Jennifer Bronsnick, MSW, LCSW.