Must Love Dogs
On a misty Saturday morning in February, College of Health Professions (CHP) Professor of Nursing Joanne Singleton, PhD; Pace鈥檚 service dog, Professor Spirit; and 25 CHP undergraduate students boarded a bus departing from Pace鈥檚 Pleasantville Campus. With coffees in hand, many students noted that while this 8:00 a.m. call-time was a departure from their traditional weekend sleep schedules, today was an exciting, special exception. The group was gearing up for a field visit to Educated Canines Assisting with Disabilities (ECAD), a nonprofit organization devoted to training service dogs who go on to be paired with individuals with disabilities.
The field trip to ECAD would be about a lot more than just playing with cute animals鈥攁lthough it would be a little bit of that, of course.
As the bus trudged down a foggy I-84E, Singleton began to discuss why an individual with a disability or a degenerative condition might benefit from a service dog鈥攁nd from the perspective of a health care practitioner, the importance of adequately understanding the needs of individuals with service animals.
The First of Its Kind
For Singleton, her interest and subsequent educational activism surrounding service animals stems from a personal friendship. This thoughtful, inventive program was inspired by the late Luis Carlos Montalv谩n, an Iraq War veteran whose life changed dramatically for the better after being paired with his service dog, Tuesday.
After hearing Montalv谩n speak at a conference, Singleton realized there was a major gap between the level of care individuals with service dogs needed, and the level of care that most health care practitioners were able to provide鈥攁s the vast majority of nurses, doctors, and other health care practitioners have never been trained to treat individuals teamed with service animals.
In other words, she realized that health care practitioners should and could be doing better.
鈥淎s I listened to Luis, I realized, these health care providers he is talking about, this could me be!鈥 said Singleton. 鈥淣o one has ever taught me about this. As an educator, I have an opportunity to teach our health profession students about this, and make a real change.鈥
"As an educator, I have an opportunity to teach our health profession students about this, and make a real change.鈥
With the help of fellow CHP Professor Lucille Ferrara, EdD, she launched Canines Assisting in Health in 2017. It was the first college curriculum in the country of its kind, primarily dedicated to educating future health care professionals about the care of patients with disabilities who are鈥攐r may benefit from being鈥攖eamed with a service dog or those who participate in animal assisted therapies. This new curriculum focused on teaching students how to include service and therapy dogs in comprehensive care treatment plans.
Singleton became certified in the human-animal bond and animal-assisted interventions, and began thinking about what kinds of interventions could most positively affect veterans and other vulnerable populations. So she took her newfound knowledge, and applied it to effecting positive change on campus.
Educating Future Practitioners
The students descended the bus and headed into the ECAD facility鈥攖he main component of which consists of a spacious room designed specifically for service dog training. Through the guidance of ECAD co-founder Lu Picard, students were teamed up with service dogs in training, and engaged in a number of activities essential to both service dog care and training grooming, walking, and much more. Through this training鈥攁s well as a Paws & Breathe庐 session led by Singleton and Professor Spirit, a non-pharmalogical intervention where students assess their stress levels before and after snuggling and meditating with the Golden Retriever鈥攕tudents were better able to gain an understanding of the complexities and rewards surrounding service animals and health care.
Many students were surprised at the level of diligence required for proper service dog training and its unforeseen nuances鈥攆or instance, Picard stressed that service dog trainers should never, ever snap their fingers to gain a dog鈥檚 attention, as a disabled individual paired with a service dog may not have the ability to snap.
鈥淎t first, it was nerve-wracking to be thrown into the training,鈥 said nursing student Caitlin Cullen 鈥22. 鈥淥verall, it was great to see the training process.鈥
Heading back to campus, students chatted animatedly amongst themselves鈥攚ith many clearly finding the trip, as well as the larger initiative in which it is built around, both compelling and rewarding.
鈥淕oing into the health care field, it鈥檚 good to be aware of how to be appropriate and respectful of service dogs,鈥 said Katherine Devaney 鈥22.
Parenting with Pups
While serving on the Community Corrections Advisory Board for Manhattan鈥檚 Metropolitan Correctional Center, Dyson Associate Professor of Criminal Justice Kimberly Collica-Cox, PhD, began to think about ways to implement rehabilitative programming that would benefit both incarcerated individuals and her criminal justice students.
After a number of fortuitous run-ins and countless hours of research, Collica-Cox and Dyson College, in conjunction with the Good Dog Foundation, started to lay the groundwork for what has ultimately become the groundbreaking Parenting, Prison, and Pups Program鈥攁n evidence based parenting program, which, through the use of therapy dogs and 台湾SWAGstudents as teaching assistants, helps incarcerated women improve parenting skills and cope with the anxieties of parent-child separation.
Through this program, Collica-Cox and her criminal justice students visit the Manhattan Correctional Center and the Westchester County Department of Correction, and over the course of 14 sessions engage in animal-assisted simulations and training programs. Given that about 1.7 million children nationwide have a mother in jail or in prison, Collica-Cox believes that the strategies taught through this program can help enhance bonds between inmates and their children, reduce recidivism, and mitigate repetitive negative parenting patterns. On the undergraduate end, the course helps criminal justice students understand the complexities of facility management and the types of beneficial rehabilitative programs that are possible.
Wet Noses, Warm Hearts
鈥淲e use the dogs in two different ways. First, as an emotional support animal,鈥 says Collica-Cox, which she notes can be quite important when individuals are disclosing personal information. Having the dogs be present with the women is a form of animal-assisted therapy. Petting the dogs, engaging with the dogs, and being present with the dogs has been shown to reduce stress, lessen anxiety, lower blood pressure and heart rate, and reduce the perceived feelings of loneliness.
鈥淭he other way is that we incorporate the dogs into actual curriculum lessons. If we were talking about things like problem-solving, we could use the dogs to start off with a problem. And then once they grasped the concept, moved to a more serious situation, like their children.鈥
鈥淭he dogs really help to open up lines of communication,鈥 says Collica-Cox. 鈥淭hey serve as benign examples, and then we can get into deeper, emotional issues around parenting and children.鈥
For instance, if you are going on vacation鈥攚ho will take care of your dog? If your dog is ill or eats a bad substance, how do you handle it? If your child keeps missing curfew, how do you respond? For one incarcerated mom, interviewed as part of a segment for News 12 Westchester, the opportunity to interact with therapy dogs like Fonzi, the admittedly handsome German Shepherd, gives her the space to talk about her children and her separation from them.
鈥淓ven though our children are not here, the class brings hope,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t brings all the mothers together.鈥
All in all, the program has been quite a success. Now entering its fourth year, it has received considerable regional and even national recognition. In 2018, Collica-Cox was awarded a prestigious national Jefferson Award for outstanding public service for her work.
Yet, arguably, the program鈥檚 real impact is exceedingly personal.
鈥淭he dogs really help to open up lines of communication,鈥 says Collica-Cox. 鈥淭hey serve as benign examples, and then we can get into deeper, emotional issues around parenting and children.鈥
For one student, the experience of working with the Parenting, Prison, and Pups program was as much a class on humanity as it was civic engagement or criminal justice. 鈥淲e got to see a population that is looked down upon, stigmatized, ridiculed,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut hearing [their stories] really hit me in the heart.鈥
Making an Impact
For both initiatives, there is still much to be done. One of Singleton鈥檚 long-term goals is to eventually affect policy, using evidence-based research to enter the insurance realm鈥攁nd ask a forward-thinking insurance company to implement insurance support for individuals to be teamed with service dogs. And Collica-Cox hopes to gain further funding for the program so that it can continue to make a difference, and perhaps even expand.
Yet, while their work is ongoing, there鈥檚 no question that when it comes to animal-assisted therapy, 台湾SWAGhas both the bark and the bite to make a true impact.