Shanghai Daily

Dogs guide the blind to a better life

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“THERE were around 50,000 applicants when our guide dog training center was first establishe­d in 2006. We got endless phone calls every day,” Wang Jingyu, founder of a guide dog training center recalled. “However, we only managed to train two that year.”

Wang became director of the Laboratory Animal Center at Dalian Medical University in northeast China’s Liaoning Province in 2001, after completing his PhD in animal behavior at a Japanese university.

“I saw many athletes with guide dogs during the 2004 Athens Paralympic Games on TV. My great-grandmothe­r also suffered from vision problems. Therefore, I’ve paid close attention to the group for a long time and came up with the idea of training guide dogs myself,” Wang said.

Starting from scratch, Wang had to conduct research and consult experts at the beginning as there was extremely limited infrastruc­ture in China.

His training center became one of the first profession­al guide dog training centers in China, providing guide dog breeding, training and guidance.

After 14 years’ developmen­t, Wang’s center made some progress. Last year, his center successful­ly trained over 30 dogs, and the success rate of training has increased from 20 percent at the beginning to 50 percent.

More than 200 certified dogs from the center have been delivered to applicants for free over the past 14 years, according to

Wang. But it’s not been easy.

“Very few trainers can stick with it due to the overwhelmi­ng workload and low payment. Each trainer has to train at least six dogs every day and do the cleaning and feeding in addition,” said Wang Lin, a trainer at the center.

The cost of training a single guide dog ranges from 150,000 yuan (US$21,000) to 200,000 yuan, which includes the payment for trainers, dog food and vaccines. The trainers’ salaries account for about 70 percent. However, the non-profit center had inadequate income.

Although the situation improved as the municipal government started to offer a 60,000-yuan subsidy for each qualified guide dog since 2010, Wang Jingyu had to sell his apartment to survive the hard times. “Some people suggested I should sell paid guide dogs, but I refused. It should be a thing to offer a glimmer of hope to visually impaired people, since most families have already borne great economic burdens,” Wang said.

Liaoning Province now has about 30,000 visually impaired people. Given this considerab­le number, Wang appealed to the local government and society to devise more supportive policies and raise.

“Blind people deserve wonderful lives. With the help of guide dogs, they can create more social value. Our guide dog trainers share a common faith to bring them another pair of eyes, and I believe China’s guide dog cause has a better future,” Wang said.

(Xinhua)

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