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Help from canine guardians

Man’s best friend aids Australian military veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

- By GLENDA KWEK The vest worn by canines in the service dogs programme in Sydney.

THEY are nicknamed “pills with four legs” – highly trained dogs helping ex-Australian military veterans overcome the mental scars of war.

Australia’s servicemen and women have in recent times been posted to danger zones in Iraq, East Timor, and Afghanista­n – the nation’s longest-running military conflict.

With some undertakin­g multiple tours of duty, psychologi­sts are concerned traditiona­l treatment such as counsellin­g do not sufficient­ly address the trauma of combat.

“I lost my home, my marriage,” said Ken Lloyd, an experience­d former special forces commando who has battled severe Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

“Thankfully I am still in contact with my sons, thankfully I’m better,” he added.

The Afghan veteran found he was able to better understand PTSD symptoms, such as anxiety and anger, when he began training his pet labrador Jaeger to help him with tasks.

Understand­ing the psychology behind training the dog, gave him an insight into his own behaviour.

“I was able to rationalis­e... why I had become hyper-vigilant, what triggers were there for aggression,” Lloyd said.

“I then started to think, well, maybe I can do this for others,” he added.

Suicide risks

A parliament­ary report last August noted that “for modern veterans, it is likely that suicide and self-harm will cause more deaths and injuries for their contempora­ries than overseas operationa­l service”.

Suicide rates for ex-servicemen were particular­ly acute, according to 2001-15 data compiled by the government’s Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

They were twice as high as those serving full-time or in the reserves – at 26 suicide deaths per 100,000 people, compared to 11 and 12 respective­ly.

Ex-servicemen were also about 14% more likely to kill themselves than men in the general population.

PTSD is the top reported condition for Iraq veterans and second-most reported for those who served in Afghanista­n, according to the Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

Former personnel are more vulnerable as they tend to show signs of PTSD when they leave the forces -- a time when support services are at the lowest, said traumatic stress specialist Zachary Steel.

“The symptoms of PTSD are actually the symptoms that you need to be combat-effective. It’s only when these fail to shut down when you return home that we realise that an injury has occurred,” he said.

“They remain engaged in a mortal threat response which isn’t appropriat­e to civilian life and actually it becomes extraordin­arily debilitati­ng over time,” he explained.

‘He’s my wingman’

Steel has been working with Lloyd and Integra Service Dogs Australia programme co-founder Ben Johnson to collect more research about the effectiven­ess of therapies such as “canine guardians”.

One of the programme’s goals is to pair veterans with the animals cheaply – an assistance dog might usually cost up to AUS$50,000 (RM155,000) – so they can help carry out everyday tasks made difficult by PTSD, such as being in public places.

For Lloyd’s scheme, costs are low because guide dog associatio­ns and Australia’s border force donate animals that are highly trained but are no longer eligible for work, sometimes due to injury.

Struggling ex-soldiers often become isolated as encounteri­ng people can trigger their symptoms, but being with the dogs helps act as a buffer between them and society, allowing them to feel better about venturing outside or interactin­g with others, Steel said.

Another aim is to get the men and women to directly teach the animals.

The training is done through group sessions so the ex-personnel can build friendship­s and a support network with people experienci­ng similar issues.

“It helps with your self-esteem, your PTSD, your depression, your anxiety,” participan­t Ashley Smith, who served in Timor as a military policeman, said.

“He’s (labrador named Leroy) my shadow, he’s my wingman, he’s everything... This programme is a life-changing thing for me.”

Another Timor veteran Shane van Beurden said his dog Kalu stops him from having a “meltdown in front of the children”.

“He helps me with PTSD if I am having a bit of anxiety or something at home,” he said. “And me and him can go for a run and I can address whatever issues I might be having, just me and my dog, you know.”

Lloyd hopes to expand the programme – launched in Canberra last February – across Australia with the help of volunteers training other veterans and dogs.

But he is already buoyed by the anecdotal success of the trial.

“These guys you see when they’re broken, and the ladies as well, they’re shattered,” he said.

“To see them smile, to enjoy something and reduce their medication and the effects of their medication, to support their therapy... is fantastic.” – AFP

 ??  ?? Australian war veterans training with service dogs in a programme in Sydney that helps them overcome Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. — Photos: AFP
Australian war veterans training with service dogs in a programme in Sydney that helps them overcome Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. — Photos: AFP
 ??  ?? ‘(The training) helps with your self-esteem, your PTSD, your depression, your anxiety,’ says Smith.
‘(The training) helps with your self-esteem, your PTSD, your depression, your anxiety,’ says Smith.
 ??  ?? Former Australian military police officer Ashley Smith (right), who served in East Timor and with the Australian Border Force, training with Leroy, his black Labrador service dog.
Former Australian military police officer Ashley Smith (right), who served in East Timor and with the Australian Border Force, training with Leroy, his black Labrador service dog.
 ??  ?? Zachary Steel, specialist in traumatic stress.
Zachary Steel, specialist in traumatic stress.
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