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Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Puppy raisers (or foster families) are volunteers who care for assistance dog puppies until they are ready to learn how to help people with a disability. During this period, some puppies develop behaviours unsuitable for assistance roles and end up changing careers or being rehomed a...

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Autores principales: Mai, Dac, Howell, Tiffani, Benton, Pree, Bennett, Pauleen C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7023113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31941065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10010128
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author Mai, Dac
Howell, Tiffani
Benton, Pree
Bennett, Pauleen C.
author_facet Mai, Dac
Howell, Tiffani
Benton, Pree
Bennett, Pauleen C.
author_sort Mai, Dac
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Puppy raisers (or foster families) are volunteers who care for assistance dog puppies until they are ready to learn how to help people with a disability. During this period, some puppies develop behaviours unsuitable for assistance roles and end up changing careers or being rehomed as pets, which is wasteful. Puppy raisers control the early experiences of their puppies, and they vary in their puppy-raising outcomes, but we do not know what specifically helps some puppy raisers produce puppies that are behaviourally suitable for an assistance role. In this study, we interviewed 17 people from seven countries who were either experienced puppy raisers or provider program staff, or both. Their responses suggested several individual factors (expectations, competency, perseverance and passion) and social factors (informational and emotional supports), in addition to the puppies’ characteristics, that influenced the experiences and perceived effectiveness of their puppy-raising practices. These factors are also evident in other well-established areas of research (e.g., education, volunteerism, social support, and organisational performance). We propose recommendations for assistance dog organisations based on those relevant frameworks, which focus on enhancing puppy raisers’ competency, positive experiences, and program retention. ABSTRACT: Assistance dog puppies live with their raisers for up to 16 months before entering advanced training and, hopefully, becoming qualified to help people with a disability. Almost half of the puppies fail to meet the behavioural standards required for assistance dogs, and some puppy raisers produce more behaviourally favourable puppies than others. It is unclear what factors influence puppy-raising practice quality. To understand this, we interviewed 17 participants, including experienced puppy raisers (n = 8), provider organisation staff (n = 4), and those who have served both as puppy raisers and staff (n = 5). Results of a thematic analysis suggest three groups of influencing factors, namely intrapersonal factors, social support, and puppy characteristics. Intrapersonal factors such as expectations, competency, perseverance and passion were reported to influence puppy raisers’ experiences, puppy-raising quality, and continuity of service. Contextual factors such as availability of social support (informational and emotional supports) and less-demanding puppies both led to positive puppy-raising experiences, while the former also contributed to puppy raisers’ perceptions of competency. Future research should quantitatively examine the interrelationships of these factors concerning puppies’ behavioural development. Meanwhile, organisations could consider these factors when developing their recruitment and puppy-raiser support programs.
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spelling pubmed-70231132020-03-12 Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders Mai, Dac Howell, Tiffani Benton, Pree Bennett, Pauleen C. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Puppy raisers (or foster families) are volunteers who care for assistance dog puppies until they are ready to learn how to help people with a disability. During this period, some puppies develop behaviours unsuitable for assistance roles and end up changing careers or being rehomed as pets, which is wasteful. Puppy raisers control the early experiences of their puppies, and they vary in their puppy-raising outcomes, but we do not know what specifically helps some puppy raisers produce puppies that are behaviourally suitable for an assistance role. In this study, we interviewed 17 people from seven countries who were either experienced puppy raisers or provider program staff, or both. Their responses suggested several individual factors (expectations, competency, perseverance and passion) and social factors (informational and emotional supports), in addition to the puppies’ characteristics, that influenced the experiences and perceived effectiveness of their puppy-raising practices. These factors are also evident in other well-established areas of research (e.g., education, volunteerism, social support, and organisational performance). We propose recommendations for assistance dog organisations based on those relevant frameworks, which focus on enhancing puppy raisers’ competency, positive experiences, and program retention. ABSTRACT: Assistance dog puppies live with their raisers for up to 16 months before entering advanced training and, hopefully, becoming qualified to help people with a disability. Almost half of the puppies fail to meet the behavioural standards required for assistance dogs, and some puppy raisers produce more behaviourally favourable puppies than others. It is unclear what factors influence puppy-raising practice quality. To understand this, we interviewed 17 participants, including experienced puppy raisers (n = 8), provider organisation staff (n = 4), and those who have served both as puppy raisers and staff (n = 5). Results of a thematic analysis suggest three groups of influencing factors, namely intrapersonal factors, social support, and puppy characteristics. Intrapersonal factors such as expectations, competency, perseverance and passion were reported to influence puppy raisers’ experiences, puppy-raising quality, and continuity of service. Contextual factors such as availability of social support (informational and emotional supports) and less-demanding puppies both led to positive puppy-raising experiences, while the former also contributed to puppy raisers’ perceptions of competency. Future research should quantitatively examine the interrelationships of these factors concerning puppies’ behavioural development. Meanwhile, organisations could consider these factors when developing their recruitment and puppy-raiser support programs. MDPI 2020-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7023113/ /pubmed/31941065 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10010128 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mai, Dac
Howell, Tiffani
Benton, Pree
Bennett, Pauleen C.
Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title_full Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title_fullStr Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title_full_unstemmed Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title_short Raising an Assistance Dog Puppy—Stakeholder Perspectives on What Helps and What Hinders
title_sort raising an assistance dog puppy—stakeholder perspectives on what helps and what hinders
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7023113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31941065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10010128
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