Leader Dogs have also been called "seeing eye dogs", guide dogs, etc.
They are, specifically, for assisting the blind.
The principal reason for existence of Lions Club International is to
raise money to be used to assist the blind. This includes funding for
research, treatment (of eye disease), training of leader dogs (a VERY
expensive and time-consuming proposition, I can assure you), schools for
the blind, and a host of other things related to helping the blind, as
well as the "normal" community service stuff.
Bud Osbourne
-----Original Message-----
From: spridgets-bounces+abcoz=hky.com@autox.team.net
[mailto:spridgets-bounces+abcoz=hky.com@autox.team.net] On Behalf Of Ron
Soave
Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2008 11:09 AM
To: spridgets@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [Spridgets] Horns....now Kate Bales
--- Bud Osbourne <abcoz@hky.com> wrote:
> BTW. I'm very familiar with Leader Dogs (I've been
> a Lion for20+
> years), but I confess my ignorance of the term "aide
> dog
I'm not familiar with Leader Dogs, but probably
similar (Kate's may have been a leader dog, I don't
remember for sure - I am more familiar with aide
dogs). In my experience, they are typically assigned
to people who may have seizures or some unpredictable
condition where emergency help is needed. I have a
friend whose daughter is unable to communicate and has
seizures. Her dog either alerts the family if they
are sleeping or in another room if something is going
wrong or in a worst case can trigger a 911 alarm. In
Kate's case, she had to travel a great distance to get
to a VA hospital for treatment, and the dog was denied
entry into the hospital. The hospital corrected that
after the news got wind of it.
Ron
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