For the mobility-impaired, highly trained canines
called 'service dogs' can pick up dropped keys,
open and close drawers, retrieve prepared meals,
help a person in and out of bathtub, dial 911, push
and pull wheelchairs, help operate a car on van
and pull off gloves, shoes, socks and jackets.
Other dogs provide specific assistance to those
who suffer seizures (sudden attacks of illness)
and require special medication. And, of course,
the helping dogs provide companionship, play and
give unconditional love to the people they assist.
It is thirty odd years now since the placement of
the first assistance dog. But only in recent years,
with the rising independent movement among
disabled people has the idea begun to spread
widely.
While most service-dogs are trained to work with
people who rely on wheelchairs, other categories
of helping dogs include hearing-dogs who alert
their owners to sounds, such as doorbells,
phones, cooking timers, alarm clocks, smoke
alarms and seizure dogs which carry medication
in their packs and are trained to dial 911 on large
keypad phones
1)the service-dogs were
a)paid highly
b)less in number
c)multiple Tasker
d) employees
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the service dog were
ok ok
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