Mental Health Foundation funding PTSD dogs for first responders - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Mental Health Foundation funding PTSD dogs for first responders

The Mental Health Foundation of Nova Scotia is raising money to pay for service dogs for first responders suffering from Post-traumatic stress disorder.

'Theyre the ones who run in when other people are running out,' says Starr Dobson

An Iraq War veteran plays with his new puppy to help with his PTSD. The Mental Health Foundation of Nova Scotia is raising money to pay for service dogs for first responders (The Associated Press)

The Mental Health Foundation of Nova Scotia is raising money to pay for service dogs for first responders suffering from Post-traumatic stress disorder.

Starr Dobson, president and CEO of the foundation, says the group decided to help fund the cause after she met with military veteran Medric Cousineau, who has championed service dogs for veterans.

He told Dobson that work led him to realize other people needed help, like 911 operators, firefighters, police officers and paramedics.

Because his funding and his project was all focused on helping veterans he was unable to really make these other really important matches. Once he filled me on on that I thought, OK lets figure out a way to make this happen. Because our first-responders are incredibly important to us. Theyre the ones who run in when other people are running out, she said.

A fundraising event on the weekend has raised enough money to match 18 first responders with dogs.

Cosineau will make the matches, after he speaks with the police and fire services in Halifax. Hes already training dogs.

Dobson says Cousineaus dog Thai calms him when hes stressed out or agitated by traumatic memories.

Hes never had a psychologist wake him up at 4:30 in the morning to say its going to be OK and that's exactly what Thai does, she said.

Howard Conter, a family physician and chairman of the board of the Tema Conter Memorial Trust, says numbers show about 20 per cent of first responders will suffer from PTSD.

The trust, named afterConters sister who was murdered by a serial killer in Toronto, helps firstresponders who suffer from the disorder. The paramedic who responded to the murder scene developed PTSD from the trauma.

Conter says the effect service dogs have on patients is palpable.

Certainly in the area of psychology and psychiatry, its a lot more art than science. If you look at the concerns of PTSD, the symptoms people show, the top three are often anxiety, panic disorder and what we call hyperarousal. There seems to be a calming effect between the dog, or in this case the service animal, and the patient which allows to bring that down out of the skies, Conter said.

For Dobson, the statistics are overwhelming.

Zero per cent of people matched with a PTSD service dog have taken their life by suicide, she said. Zero per cent.

Dobson says the foundation is still looking for donations to match even more responders with PTSD dogs.