[nagdu] Service dog for child's peanut allergy

Ginger Kutsch gingerKutsch at yahoo.com
Tue Mar 3 00:42:44 UTC 2009


On the Scent: Dogs Sniff Out Peanuts
Man's Best Friend Brings Safety to a Childhood Plagued by a
Severe Food Allergy
By NEAL KARLINSKY
MONUMENT, Colo.,
 
March 2, 2009- 
 

Riley Mers and her Portuguese water dog Rock'O seem like any
ordinary pair, but nothing about this 8-year-old girl and her pet
is ordinary. 
 
"It might look to you like it's a kid playing with a dog," said
Riley's mother, Sherry Mers. "To me, that's a dog that's saving
my daughter's life while they're playing." 
 
Riley's peanut allergy is so severe that if the Monument, Colo.,
girl even touches something with peanut residue it is enough to
send her to the hospital. 
 
"I got a peanut shell caught in my sandal when I was really
little, and they almost had to do a skin graft on me," she said.
"It felt like a hundred ants bit me and stung me." 
 
If she were to eat something with peanuts in it, Riley would have
about six minutes to reach the hospital before her body would go
into shock. 
 
"Her case is about as bad as they come," said Dr. Daniel Soteres,
a Colorado Springs allergy and immunology specialist. "An
exposure to peanut could be a life-threatening event to her." 
 
Enter Rock'O and a new approach to help safeguard kids with
severe food allergies. Rock'O is one of a half-dozen dogs in the
country trained to detect the presence of peanuts and protect
their owners from serious allergic reactions. 
 
"Training a peanut allergy dog to sniff out peanuts is much like
training a dog to do narcotics or bomb sniffing," said Tina
Rivero, head trainer of Angel Service Dogs in Monument. "It's
just a different scent that they are hitting on. Instead of the
marijuana or the cocaine or the bomb, they are actually finding
the peanut." 
 
Dealing with peanut allergies is not new for most schools, but
the severity of Riley's allergy has presented some special
challenges. To keep herself protected from peanut residue in
class, Riley used to have to wear gloves. Now, night and day,
Rock'O goes everywhere with her. 
 
"I've gone to school and not had to ask all my classmates like I
do every single time, 'Have you eaten peanut butter?'" she said.
"With him [Rock'O], I can have a little bit of free will. I don't
feel scared anymore about what I'm going to eat." 
 

Peanut-Sniffing Dog Searches Lunchroom
The first week of school with Rock'O, Sherry Mers took the
friendly Portuguese water dog to the cafeteria for a safety
check. 
 
Rock'O sniffed the tables and floor, scanning for any trace of
peanuts left from anyone's lunch. Finding peanut residue on the
lunchroom table, he sits in his "alert" position -- a stance he's
been trained to make to let Riley know that he's found something
she should avoid. 
 
For Riley and her family, Rock'O is more than just an added
safeguard -- he's freedom and a chance at a normal childhood. 
 
"I can actually go to the mall. I can actually go to bowling
alleys," she said. "I'm wanting to go to college, and I'm going
to be able to." 
 
A highly trained dog like Rock'O can cost anywhere between
$10,000 and $15,000, which was more than the Mers family could
afford. But when friends and family heard about the possibility,
they came forward with donations to help. 
 
"I never in a million years dreamed that there were so many kind
people that just totally wanted to help a child," Sherry Mers
said. 
 
Until now, a deadly allergy has always held Riley back in life.
Now, Rock'O has taken this little girl off her leash. 
 
"This isn't just freedom for today, this is her first date
without her mom," Sherry Mers said. "This is her getting to do
things on her own without us constantly being her shadow."
 
Source: http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=6990365



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