Albuquerque Journal

Setting up a scared dog for success

- Each week, Dr. Jeff Nichol makes a short video, blog or podcast to help bring out the best in pets. Sign up at no charge at drjeffnich­ol.com. Dr. Nichol treats behavior disorders at the Veterinary Emergency & Specialty Centers in Albuquerqu­e and Santa Fe

Remember Luna from last week? She actually liked people, despite her panic and potentiall­y dangerous freak-outs. She desperatel­y wanted to be free of feeling trapped, ample reason to repeat her reactive lunging and snapping. These aggressive displays had chased off so many “scary monsters” that they became her default reaction.

Setting Luna up for success would mean avoiding her fear triggers. Abandoning these situations would be essential because every time her arousal ramped up, the responsibl­e neural circuits in her brain became stronger and more thickly networked. With more repetition, she would react even faster and inch closer to her threshold for loss of impulse control. That could mean human injuries.

We never want a scared dog to perceive a threat. No one should ever be allowed to approach, reach for, lean over or stare if there is any history of defensive behavior. Even her trusted leaders should invite her to come to them by sitting or squatting. She will choose to approach when she is not afraid.

If guests want to interact with a scared dog like Luna, they can sit on the floor with their side turned toward her, speak quietly and use a tasty treat to lure her to them. They’ll need to avoid sudden movements that could trigger fear.

A safe and simple method for controllin­g a potentiall­y reactive dog would be to leave a 6-foot leash attached to her collar so you can step on it, pick it up and lead her away. And, of course, a relaxed dog should be quietly reinforced at every opportunit­y.

Luna’s people did a great job of enabling her improvemen­t. As she gradually learned to relax, I explained how they could teach her to divert her attention from a fear trigger with a response substituti­on method called targeting.

Immediatel­y after touching her nose to a target stick, Luna was reinforced with a click and then a tasty tidbit. With enough hundreds of repetition­s, a formerly reactive dog can learn to look to her leader whenever she starts feeling a bit wiggy. Come back next week for the rest of the story. (I miss Paul Harvey.)

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PET CARE

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