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Licking their wounds: Trained dogs assist, comfort wounded Airmen

  • Published
  • By Sean Kimmons
  • Air Force News Service
Constant back pain from an injury suffered years ago in combat still troubles Staff Sgt. Ryan Garrison. It wakes him up at night when his medication wears off. It triggers his depression and anxiety, leading to angry outbursts.

“The smallest thing would set me off,” Garrison said. His home once had several holes in the walls after he punched through them to calm his rage. “I didn’t know a healthy way to deal with it.”

Several prescriptions and mental health visits didn’t effectively assist with his emotional state. The 39-year-old defense courier then met Luke, a pitch-black Labrador.

Always at his side, the skilled service dog can sense anxious feelings in Garrison and will nudge his leg with his snout to trip up the negative thoughts.

“You get your mind off what was causing the anxiety,” said Garrison, who has since medically retired after serving 14 years. “You realize it before it becomes a full-blown panic attack.”

With these cues, he said his panic attacks have dropped by half since he’s received Luke from Warrior Canine Connection, a nonprofit that trains dogs for wounded military members.

“Dogs have been shown to be able to detect trace amounts of chemicals,” said Rick Yount, the group’s executive director. “Human emotions are chemically driven. Obviously, medications wouldn’t work if that wasn’t true.”

WCC is involved in two major studies focusing on service dogs for wounded warriors. In 2014, Congress earmarked $7 million for researchers to look at how dogs are helping military members at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. A year before that, the nonprofit teamed up with the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, located next to the hospital, on a $750,000 Defense Department grant.

Reducing meds

A decade after his combat-related injury, Garrison is reaping the benefits of Luke’s intuition. The four-legged helper even wears a harness that Garrison can clutch, giving him leverage that pulls him up when the dog walks forward -- a less painful way for the Airman to stand up due to a torn disc in his back.

“When it flares up, I lose all feeling in my right leg. Luke helps with my mobility,” he said, noting that he rarely uses a cane now.

In 2006, Garrison was hauling a shipment on a cargo loader at Kirkuk Air Base, Iraq, when an insurgent fired a rocket-propelled grenade over the fence. The RPG missed him but the nearby explosion thrust him backward, causing him to bend backward across a railing, resulting in the torn disc.

The injury nagged him for years and led to sleep disturbances and mental health problems.

“You try to fake it for so many years that you finally realize that you need to see somebody,” he said.

He was prescribed medications that initially soothed symptoms, but the side effects produced even more.

“The first medication I took gave me 15 side effects,” he recalled. “My anxiety attacks had fewer symptoms than my side effects.”

For some veterans, service dogs can provide a path to easing drug dependency for mental illnesses, said retired Maj. Gen. Kevin Pottinger.

Many service dog groups across the country are gaining popularity as more veterans seek treatment, he said.

Dealing with two recent wars, the Department of Veterans Affairs has seen disability recipient numbers grow from 2.3 to 3.7 million between 2000 and 2013. A steady stream of disabled vets will likely continue, as the post-9/11 veteran population is set to climb by more than 50 percent from 2013-2018, according to VA’s latest data.

“We have so many veterans with traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress disorder that they just can’t provide enough dogs to take care of all our vets,” Pottinger said of service dog groups.

It can take up to two years before a dog is permanently placed with a veteran, he added.

Garrison heard of the natural healing approach when his wife, Julie, a music therapist, saw the service dogs at Walter Reed. She convinced him to look into it.

“I can now have my husband back,” she said. “Luke forces him to be in the present. The dog is trained to respond to his triggers before he explodes.”

Healing more vets


Golden and Labrador retriever puppies embark on a two-year regimen by the WCC to learn how to assist veterans when needed. During that time, the dogs are trained by wounded warriors and are taken to medical centers to interact with others.

Over the training period, the nonprofit estimates that one dog will reach at least 60 wounded warriors.

While attending therapy sessions at Walter Reed, the dogs caught the attention of retired Master Sgt. Jesse Graham, who suffered a broken neck during a snowboarding accident.

The wheelchair-bound Graham went on to help train a dog, and last year was given Stanley, another black Labrador.

“My arms get tired pushing myself around all the time,” the 32-year-old former Airman said. “He’s able to pull me when I get worn out.”

A high-functioning quadriplegic, Graham stays active in several sports and competes in the Warrior and Invictus Games. But Stanley stays close by to assist with the small stuff. He flicks on light switches, opens doors, fetches shoes, and can be used as a brace.

“He can literally pick up a dime with his mouth, not swallow it and drop it in your hand,” he said.

As playful creatures, dogs can even get reclusive PTSD sufferers, like Garrison, to open up.

“He’s an icebreaker in talking to people,” Garrison said of Luke. “I’ve always tried to avoid conversations out in public. But people now come up to me to pet him and it forces me to be more social.”

Service dogs may help ease the symptoms of some ailments, but experts recommend that a dog be used to supplement other treatments.

Still, Yount said it’s hard to ignore the chemistry between these dogs and wounded warriors.

“I really do believe, based on the science, that it’s not magic and there’s something powerful happening here,” he said. “We’ve seen enough positive results now that this is offering important benefits and not showing side effects that we’re significantly concerned with.”

But there are at least two side effects: drool and fur.

(November is Warrior Care Month, a time for the military community to reaffirm its commitment to the recovery and reintegration of the nation's wounded, ill and injured service members. For more related articles, click here.)