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Recipe for Treating Reactivity

2/9/2020

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Dogs who are reactive display aggressive symptoms for 1 of 2 reasons:  fear or frustration.  Sometimes, it's a combination of both.  Usually, the issue is primarily on-leash, not off-leash.  Why?  Because the dog's fight or flight response is inhibited by being on-leash.  They cannot go after what they're excited to see, nor can they run away from what they're afraid of.

Terminology review:
  • Trigger:  the person, place, or thing your dog reacts negatively to.
  • Threshold:  the space between the dog and the trigger required for the dog to remain in control of themselves.  For sounds, the threshold is not so much space as volume.  We always want to work on the dog's triggers under threshold, below the point at which the dog is upset.
  • Trigger stacking:  allowing the dog to experience distress from multiple triggers in a short period of time.

When we meet to address your reactive dog's behavior issues, my solution will be customized to you and your dog, based on my observations in the first session.  However, these are my go-to behaviors to train for reactive dogs:
  • Emergency U-Turn.  In order to be successful, dogs must remain under threshold.  The number 1 tool in your toolbox for your reactive dog is space.  However, the dogs will often lunge and pull toward the trigger and not want to get away initially.  The emergency u-turn teaches the dog it is highly valuable to voluntarily walk away with you.  I use the cue "Let's go."
  • Mat + relaxation protocol.  I will teach all reactive dogs to go to a mat, lie down, and stay until released.  Then begin Dr. Karen Overall's Mat Relaxation Protocol.  Once you're up to level 6 or so, we're ready to take it outside and begin using the mat as a safe zone for dealing with triggers.  By providing structure, you give the dog a way to tolerate their triggers in their space, and also give you polite cues of permission for closeness.  If the dog breaks the mat stay, you know the trigger is too close.  There is no need for aggression.
  • Leave It.  Especially for dogs who are frustrated, this behavior is essential.  By being able to keep themselves from going for something they want, the dogs learn how to cope with that sort of stress in a positive way.  Start with something only kind of valuable, and work up to something that really gets your dog going.  Add duration (how long they have to look at you and leave the temptation alone before being rewarded).  I use Leave It & Get It in tandem with toys, or Leave It and reward with something else with food.  That way, the dogs can experience the relief of getting what they want, or understand it's just as valuable to never get the initial temptation.
  • Watch Me.  This is absolutely essential.  Reactive dogs are often hyper-vigilant, constantly scanning the environment for triggers.  This does no one any good, and increases the stress level in the dog.  By teaching the dog to default to focusing on the owner, we give them an alternate behavior to fill the void scanning leaves behind.  We also teach the dog good walking manners by building duration with Watch Me and adding motion.  A dog pulling on the leash and forging ahead cannot comfortably look at their owner on a walk.

If your dog is frustrated, please consider investing in a flirt pole, or at least playing tug frequently with your dog.  This is the best way I have found for most dogs to vent their frustration.  If your dog tends to redirect onto the leash by biting it when triggered, consider using a braided fleece tug leash.  Muzzling the dog and preventing their biting does nothing to vent the built up frustration.  I only recommend muzzling if the dog is a threat to themselves, their owner, or other animals.

I like to give dogs a detox period prior to starting work.  For at least 1 week, avoid all scenarios that may trigger your dog.  One major incident can release the stress enzyme, cortisol, into your dog's system that will stay in their bloodstream for up to 7 days.  So if your dog got really upset on Thursday and our session is on Friday, we'll be attempting to combat that day's stresses and Thursday's as well.

Please avoid trigger stacking as much as possible.  Never try to tackle a dog's fear of the vacuum, frustration around other dogs, and wariness of strange people in hats all in the same session.  Focus on one trigger per session.
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Behavior Modification & Medication

2/9/2020

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This is a touchy subject, and for good reason.  There is a lot of stigma around behavioral medication for people and dogs.  Medication is seen as a band-aid and overused.  As someone who suffers from PTSD, I had a period of about a year where I personally took prescription medication (Ativan as needed for anxiety, and Lexapro for depression) after a car accident.  I've also had a dog who warranted being on medication for fear and aggression.  It took me 3 years to come around to the idea, and those 3 years were VERY difficult, even with me as a professional trainer.  I finally sought the opinion of a board-certified veterinary behaviorist, who immediately said my dog should be on medication.  I finally acquiesced, and that medication gave us 2 more years together, and they were the best years.

How do they work?  Prozac (or the generic Fluoxetine) is an anti-depressant in people, and can also help dogs suffering with fear and anxiety.  The aggressive symptoms they display become less intense or go away entirely.  The disadvantage is this medication has a loading period of a few weeks to get into the dog's system, and playing with the dose is necessary to find the magic.  Dogs on the right dose do not act like zombies or seem in any way "drugged up."  They are simply benefitting from the medication and doing better.  Prozac requires a weaning off period to avoid withdrawal.  Trazadone helps with fear and anxiety as well, and has a mild calming effect at the right dose.  The advantage is it is fast acting and there is no withdrawal to consider.  The disadvantage is the calming effect and that it is situational, you must keep giving the dog the medication for the effects to be seen, it does not build up in their system like Prozac does.

I'm never trying to "load your dog up with drugs."  If a dog warrants being on such medication as Prozac or Trazadone, the goal is ALWAYS to wean them off after the medication has had time to provide its service.  That period can be between 6 months and a year or so.  Sometimes, it's purely a chemical imbalance causing the behavioral symptoms, and during the weaning off process, it is determined that the dog should remain on the medication indefinitely.  However, that is not the goal, my intention, or what usually happens.  The medication is a tool, just like a training harness.  The goal is always to wean off tools as the dog's training progresses and improves.

Generally speaking, these dogs don't have a particular traumatic event causing their fear and aggression.  I usually try to tackle just that trauma without medication.  These dogs were bred by irresponsible breeders who didn't consider temperament enough before having a litter of adorable puppies and selling them to unsuspecting owners or surrendering them for adoption.  However, even responsible breeders who do everything right can have an off puppy in a litter of otherwise happy-go-lucky, normal puppies.  When I take a history and determine the owner has owned the dog their entire life, from puppyhood, and done everything "right" but the dog is still extremely upset, no amount of training the world can fix genetics and brain chemistry.  Besides genetics, prolonged stress can also alter brain chemistry, creating neural pathways that prohibit stress management and increase anxiety and/or aggression.  If your dog is 2 years old or older, has always "been like this," and is constantly in distress, that's a huge red flag for poor brain chemistry.  It takes a very severe case for me to recommend medication for dogs under 2 years old.  Puppies are developing physically and emotionally, going through various phases -- so I prefer to wait.  

Medication as part of a Behavior Modification Plan will help the adjust chemicals in the dog's brain that control stress and make everything easier.  The dog's quality of life improves because they're not so upset by their triggers, and training will progress exponentially faster because the dog has a better frame of mind from which to learn.  I will be an advocate for the dog and recommend medication if I deem it advantageous to our plan.  


Having just been informed someone thought I was "a piece of sh*t trainer" for recommending their dog try behavioral medication (Fluoxetine, the generic for Prozac), I wanted to outline my personal criteria for recommending a prescription for medication from your vet in case it can help someone else in future:
  1. The dog displays multiple triggers that create an intense reaction.  If your dog trembles in fear and/or growls and barks with aggression to multiple triggers such as everyday sights (bikes, dogs, people, etc.) or sounds (vacuum, sirens, wind through leaves, etc.), the quality of life for your dog must be very low.  If they are easily triggered by multiple everyday things, they are in a constant state of stress.  That isn't fair to the dog, but we can't remove these items from their lives realistically; especially not long enough for counter-conditioning protocols to begin to take effect.  Behavior modification, done correctly, takes a long time and lots of patience for all involved.  Rushing emotional healing never works and usually backfires.
  2. The dog displays severe aggression (especially human aggression) and may have a bite history, especially if the bite was a level 3 or higher (drew blood).  If the only reason your dog doesn't have a bite history is because it's in a muzzle or on a leash, this is a very similar issue of quality of life as with the dog in #1.  I always try a session or 2 to tackle these cases with counter-conditioning protocols to see how much progress can be made without medication. (I am just finishing up a case where a dog was slated for behavioral euthanasia at a shelter for being "un-rehabilitatable." He was saved by a rescue despite his bite history, and adopted by a wonderful family committed to helping him overcome his fears.  His food drive is so intense, we were able to make him safe and manageable without medication in 5 sessions.)  If after a couple sessions I'm not seeing the minimum level of progress I would expect, given my experience with hundreds of other cases, I will recommend medication.
  3. There are children involved, or there is a quick timeline requirement.  If the dog is living with children and their safety is at risk, I will be more likely to recommend medication.  Sometimes, people need to travel and need the dog better enough by a particular date, or there is a dog in a rescue or shelter with extreme behavioral issues not getting adopted and their time is running out.  I will be more liberal in recommending medication in these circumstances.  Shelters often put aggressive or fearful dogs on Trazadone to make them more adoptable since it's such a high-stress period of life even for a behaviorally healthy dog.  That includes dogs in foster homes, because they've been uprooted from whatever their normal life was, and put into a completely different one.  That's extremely unsettling, even for people who can be told why it's happening.
  4. The dog suffers from separation anxiety and is mutilating themselves.  Some dogs who suffer from severe forms of separation anxiety will turn their stress on themselves and chew wounds into their limbs.  I knew a client's dog who chewed off their own toe and ate it.  Another dog chewed off the tip of their tail.  Or they will try to break out of whatever containment they are in (a crate, for example) and end up injuring themselves in the process.  I will immediately recommend medication in these cases, for the dog's well-being and safety.
  5. We have personally tried, or you have previously tried with another trainer, to solve things with standard behavior modification protocols, and perhaps calming supplements like lavender spray, L-carnitine or CBD, but it's just not working.  If we've done about half a dozen sessions together (or you've had them with another trainer using similar methods) and seen no significant improvement despite doing all the required homework, it would likely be irresponsible to continue without suggesting medication.  Sometimes, a dog is so shut down, we can't tell their level of stress purely by observation.  Dogs are designed to hide weakness, and it may take a few sessions to discover just how much a dog is unstable mentally.
  6. The owners' level of involvement.  If the owners are very busy and don't have a lot of time to dedicate to working with the dog everyday, but are committed to keeping the dog, I may recommend medication to speed things along.

I will ALWAYS respect the wishes of the owner.  There is no judgment either way the owner decides.  If you decline medication, that is your right.  If I believe it possible to do safely, we may continue on with training as best we can.  If I feel very strongly the dog should be on medication for safety reasons, I will terminate the training relationship.  I don't report owners as neglectful to animal control for declining behavioral medications.  This is a very personal decision, but my priority is 100% the quality of life for the dog.

When I recommend medication, you can get that medication from your veterinarian or a veterinary behaviorist.  I am not a doctor, so I cannot prescribe medication.  It is then the responsibility of the veterinarian to also determine the dog warrants medication.  I have yet to have a veterinarian turn down a client after I make the recommendation.  Note:  this means that 100% of clients who followed my recommendation to seek medication for their dog have been approved by their veterinarian.  However, there are veterinarians who don't like to prescribe these medications and refuse to even entertain the idea -- you can go to another vet and ask for a second opinion.
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Separation Anxiety - Avoiding it and dealing with mild forms.

10/5/2019

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Separation anxiety (sep-anx) is very common in dogs in mild forms, especially during times of transition:  when the dog or puppy first comes home, if they're staying somewhere away from home, or if you move to a new home, etc.  Sep-anx can be from more than just home, it extends to other human and animal family members with whom the dog has bonded.  Addressing the potential for this from day 1 with your new dog will help tremendously, but the protocol I'm going to outline is for any dog with mild to moderate separation anxiety.

Note:  if your dog is an escape artist, digs out of an outdoor enclosure, destroys crates, and/or eliminates or injures themselves when left alone for any prolonged period of time, this protocol is NOT SUFFICIENT for you.  I highly recommend we do a consult, you start with Malena DeMartini's work, and/or consult with your veterinarian or a qualified veterinary behaviorist about medication.

The main issue is a lack of object permanence, which is a core understanding that even though the dog cannot sense the presence of someone or something, that thing still exists.  For dogs, if they can no longer see, smell, taste, touch, or hear you, you have disappeared from the face of the earth forever.  This leads to all sorts of common behavior problems, such as over-exuberance when you return home, excitement  urination when greeting people, and of course, separation anxiety.  The most important thing is to teach the dog that what they value comes back.  In order to do this, we must practice leaving and returning so many times, the dogs lose interest and can begin to trust we'll return.  This is when repetition, not duration, is most important.

All of my dogs, when they first come home, experience me leaving the house for no particular reason every 15 - 30 minutes, depending on the severity of their sep-anx.  I walk out the door and close it, then immediately return.  I repeat this whenever I'm home until the dog has no reaction to me leaving or returning.  It's boring and part of the norm.  I can add duration for while I'm outside, such as counting to 10 or walking farther away, or stretch out the time for the interval to an hour or more.  The more frequent, the more normal -- the less frequent, the more exciting.  I would also do a lot of dummy leaves where I got ready to leave, but didn't leave.  Dogs catch on to patterns very quickly, and putting on shoes, getting keys, putting on a coat, and grabbing a bag are tell-tale signs that you're leaving.  This is my go-to starting point for all my mild sep-anx cases.

Of course, we want to keep the dog safe when we do have to be away for a long period of time.  I highly recommend confinement in a crate that is sturdy (solid metal or plastic with air holes is usually most resistant to escaping/avoids self-injury).  You can do Susan Garrett's crate games to get them to willingly participate in crating, as well as feed them all their meals in their crate.  I made the crate the starting point for all play interactions as well, both inside and outside (from the car).  I also practiced a lot of going in and out when I didn't need to leave them in their crate for very long, adding it to part of my dummy leave routine.

If a crate is not what you prefer, a bathroom or laundry room, ex-pen, or another small space may be a viable alternative.  However, it is likely that the dog will chew, paw at, and scratch near the door.  If so, be prepared to repair your home, and please do not get mad at your dog for doing it.  Ensure the room is escape-proof, do not leave windows open where the dog could launch through a screen and venture out trying to find you.

Some dogs do very well having another canine or feline companion.  If your dog is your only pet and they have mild to moderate separation anxiety, consider getting them a friend if they have a high social drive.  For many dogs, however, they have no need for a companion other than their human family, or they simply are too intensely codependent on their people, and another dog or cat will not suffice to soothe their sep-anx.

While you're away, give your dog something to enjoy that will take the sting out of your absence and departure.  A frozen Kong, bully stick, or marrow bone can be a wonderful chew to soothe their anxiety.  There are even multiple Kong recipes to try for variety.

When you do return home from being away for an extended period, it is likely your dog will be tremendously relieved that you've arrived and will be jumping out of their skin to see you.  For many of us, this greeting is part of the reason we got a dog; however, I urge you not to reward this state of mind with affection and reassurance.  You will be reinforcing how valuable your return is, and contributing to their sep-anx.  Please be "boring" when you return until your dog calms down.  This allows them to come back into their mind and body in a healthy way.  Once calm, or at least calmer, then you can resume your normal greeting routine.  Once the sep-anx is resolved, you do not need to continue this part of the treatment.

Some dogs have severe separation anxiety that cannot be helped with the above outlin alone.  When to draw the line:
  • Your dog does significant damage to your home in under 1 hour or on a regular basis.
  • Your dog has injured themselves trying to escape their crate.
  • Your dog has mangled a crate and/or escaped it.
  • Your dog cries constantly, unable to rest for hours in your absence.
  • Your dog is inconsolable with chew toys, doesn't touch them when you're gone but devours them when you return.
  • Seems to have other physical illnesses related to stress (pancreatitis, upset stomach, excessive skin irritations from allergies, etc.).
If your dog falls into this category from any of the above examples, it is time to seek further help than what is recommended here.  As mentioned, I will do a consult with you or you can seek a veterinarian or veterinary behaviorist, or someone who has been certified by Malena DeMartini.  There are other professionals who may be well-qualified who aren't any of these things, such as myself, but it is hard for me to recommend them.

If you have any tips I haven't mentioned or wish to get more specific, please comment below!
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Welcoming your new puppy!  (Or a dog new to your household.)

10/4/2019

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Congratulations!  You're about to welcome a new puppy into your household.  I'm so excited for you, I wanted to write a post about my common recommendations for new puppy owners.

If your puppy came from a breeder or a foster home, they likely already have a head-start on socialization, separation anxiety, crate training, and house training.  If your puppy is from a shelter kennel, then you'll have to be extra diligent to avoid accidents and destruction in the house, as well as ramp up your socialization efforts with items they couldn't be exposed to in a shelter environment.  Whether you did or didn't rescue isn't the point -- I don't judge!  This is just information you need to set yourself and your new puppy up for success.

First off, your new puppy is disoriented being in their new home.  Please be patient, and the first order of business is to teach your puppy their name and come so that they will come back to you if they get away for any reason.  After that, house proof your home.  Remove excessive hazards from puppy reach:  cables, laundry, remotes, shoes, decor that is purely decorative, etc.  This protects your home, belongings, and the puppy!  If you are unable to remove or hide cables, consider blocking off that area of your home so your puppy doesn't electrocute themselves chewing on what looks like a fun chew stick that turns out to be extra chewy and bendy.  Oh so satisfying!  Decide if you want your puppy to be allowed on the furniture, and stick to it unanimously throughout the household.  All my dogs are allowed on my furniture, and all my dogs sleep with me if they want to.

Next, house training.  My regimen looks something like this:
  • Go out very first thing in the morning to their designated potty area or on a walk.  Wait until they pee and poop, then offer them an extra scrumptious treat, like string cheese or a tiny piece of hot dog.  Be sure you reward after every elimination for the first 2 weeks at least, longer if they're having trouble catching on.
  • Go out every hour, on the hour, when someone is home.  Make a habit of offering your puppy the opportunity on a regular basis to eliminate outside.  Just like toddlers, they may not think of it on their own until it's too late.  As your puppy matures, they may not have to go every time, and that's ok.  Wait about 5 minutes just to be sure.  When they aren't going every hour, you can stretch it out to every 2 or 3 hours.  The general rule of thumb is that a puppy can hold it 1 hour for every month they're alive, + 1 hour when active during the day.  Overnight is longer, because their body is in rest mode and all their systems slow down.  I often receive reports of 8-week-old puppies lasting 5-8 hours their first night home!  Set an alarm to take your puppy out after about 4 hours overnight if you won't hear them crying to be let out.
  • Go out after anything that may trigger their digestion or bladder:  eating a meal, getting a drink of water, playing, training, napping, etc.  Also go out just before you leave the house for any length of time or to go to bed for the night.
  • If your puppy cannot be actively supervised by someone while they're home, be sure to tether the puppy to someone responsible enough to notice the puppy's signals if they need to go out.  Those may include:  pacing, whining, circling, sniffing, trying to get to the door that leads outside, scratching at a door, etc.
  • If no one can tether the puppy to them (for example, when cooking dinner and the puppy will be in the way) or if no one is home, confine the puppy to a small area.  The area may need to start as a small crate, only big enough to let the puppy stand up, turn around, and lie down to avoid accidents at first.  They can graduate to bigger and bigger areas as they are successful not having accidents.  If no one is available to walk the puppy after 2-3 hours, it is alright to leave a potty pad in their enclosure, but this is NOT ideal.  I only recommend potty pads for very young puppies when they first come home.  Otherwise, a crate-trained puppy can hold it 4 hours in your absence, because they will be sleeping. 
  • Note:  I do not recommend leaving a puppy or a dog for longer than 4-6 hours without an opportunity to relieve themselves.  Daycare or a dog walker is an option for professionals who simply don't have the ability to walk while they're at work for 8-9 hours.  Please allow a budget for this if you fall into this category before getting a dog or puppy.  Yes, dogs can hold it the whole time, but they are very bored and it does put a strain on their system.
  • I never recommend having an indoor potty area for an older puppy or adult dog.  It confuses the dog that inside could ever be a toilet and it's best to just avoid it altogether.  Yes, many dogs do well being "litter trained," but that's not the point of a dog's lifestyle.  They need to get out, sniff, patrol, explore, walk and travel with their family.  That's what dogs do.
  • You can start to allow your puppy more freedom and a larger confinement space as they are successfully choosing to go outside and not having accidents.  There will likely be setbacks, and that's normal!  Go back a step and try again in a week or so.  All my dogs free-roam my house while I'm at home and away without issue.

Once house training is squared away, it's time to plan some activities to fulfill your puppy's drives!  Many dogs and puppies are food motivated, so scent games where they have to find a treat in a box and use their nose to tell where the box is and which box has a treat is a must.  After that, is your dog a terrier?  They'll love to chase a toy, catch it, and "kill" it!  If your dog is a retriever, fetch is the obvious game.  If your dog is a sighthound, have them practice stay, walk away as far as you're able, then have them launch to chase a flirt pole.  If your dog is a scenthound, the above nose work game is a good start, but tracking a trail (hot dog juice?) outside in the yard would be way more fun, especially if they found a prize at the end!  If your dog is a herder, I find a flirt pole and/or the sport of treibball are excellent substitutes for sheep or cattle in urban environments.  If your dog is a brainiac in need of constant stimulation, trick training can be a wonderful outlet.  If your dog loves the water, consider getting them a kiddie pool if you don't have a full-size pool for them to use.  If your dog loves to dig, build or purchase them their very own sandbox to save your yard and give them an outlet for that drive.  Never consider a "naughty" behavior something "bad" about your dog, it's just a drive waiting to be given an appropriate purpose!

If you're having any trouble with your new dog or puppy, I'd be happy to do what I can to help!  Some things I can answer with a quick email, other things we'll need to schedule a consultation for.  I do remote consults via Skype for those out of my service area.

Separation anxiety will be addressed in a separate post soon.  I'll link it here when I've written it.  Stay tuned!

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Tools Summary

8/26/2019

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I wanted to explain, briefly, what each tool in the dog training toolkit is used for.  I'm going to start with the tools I use and recommend, and then move on to the ones I don't.  However, I'm not going to start a debate, or vilify other trainers who do use them.

Tools I use and recommend:
  1. Standard buckle or tag collar.  This collar is not intended to be for training or walking purposes.  It is purely decorative.  Walking a dog with leash attached to the tag collar can cause major tracheal damage should the dog lunge after something or pull for an extended period of time, and is not recommended.
  2. Martingale collar.  The wider, the kinder.  This collar, when fitted properly, is inescapable.  So for dogs with an impressive display of flips, turns, and bucks to escape or back out of their normal gear, this is an excellent tool.  Contrary to what I've heard from some other trainers, martingale collars do not help with leash pulling.  They were designed for sighthounds, whose extremely narrow heads allow normal collars to come off, even without trying to slip them.  I use them in conjunction with front-clip harnesses, like the Balance Harness, as well as head collars, like the one by Dogs My Love.
  3. Harness.  There are several types, and I wanted to describe the ones I don't recommend first.  There's step-in ones that buckle on the back -- which is great for head shy dogs.  However, I find the buckle digs into the spine if the dog pulls forward or lags behind.  Then there's types that have a strap that goes straight across the chest and shoulders, such as the Easy Walk, ComfortFlex, and Freedom harnesses.  These harnesses seriously impede movement and affect the natural gait of the dog.  There are harnesses designed for pulling sleds and weight pull sports, but aren't used for dogs on leashed walks.  There are various types of padded harnesses intended for maximum comfort on hikes -- which I do recommend.  My personal favorite is Ruffwear's Front-Range harness, which also has a tab in the front for leash attachment to inhibit mild pulling.  I highly recommend this harness in conjunction with my K9 Lunging Method for teaching leash walking, as well as freedom of movement for hiking or doing parkour.
  4. Head collars.  This is a management tool only, to inhibit extreme pullers when there isn't time for training.  That, or the dog will be in an environment beyond their current level of training.  I don't prefer the ones with narrow bands, like Gentle Leader and Halti, due to the numerous scars left on dogs who pull on them for extended periods.  I like the one you can order on Amazon by Dogs My Love.  These are collars that are based on negative reinforcement, so there should NEVER be constant pressure on the device.  Give and take.

Now I wanted to get into the tools that I have used before, and don't recommend:
  1. Slip or choke collar.  This collar, when used correctly, is based on negative reinforcement.  The tighter the collar becomes, the more aware the dog becomes, and so the dog yields to the pressure.  The looser the collar is, the more rewarding to the dog, so the dog learns not to pull.  However, it is very easy to misuse this collar, leading to tracheal damage, cutting off the airway, and in extreme cases, choking and suffocation until unconscious.
  2. Prong or pinch collar.  This collar was designed to create even pressure points all around the neck, and avoids tracheal damage from slip, martingale, and buckle collars.  It looks like a medieval torture device, but isn't when used correctly.  I don't recommend using it to inhibit reactivity.  The fallout of doing it incorrectly is highly likely.  I have seen it used successfully on leash pulling and loss of focus.  However, it is very easy to over-correct, and leaving it on too long or having it poorly fitted can lead to collar sores.  The dogs become collar wise, and are no longer as well-trained when the prong collar is off.
  3. Electronic (e), shock, or stim collar.  Sends various intensities of electric stimulation to the skin.  Also has beeping and vibration functions.  I've seen the vibration function used successfully with some deaf dogs.  I have seen plenty of seemingly comfortable dogs with e-collars.  However, I've seen the beeps make dogs paranoid about microwave timers, smoke alarms, and cell phone notifications.  I've seen dogs yelp from a stim turned up too high.  I've seen burn marks from a cheap shock collar.  I've seen dogs become wise to the collar, and fail to respond when not wearing it.  In desperation, I was convinced to try this collar on a dog of mine.  With proper guidance, I would say it did help where nothing else did as far as her ability to focus around high distractions.  However, it was not the cure-all that was promised.  I've since learned techniques that would allow me to never need it again on a physically healthy dog.  I do believe they may have their place for some deaf dogs.

In short, all tools are bandaids, and don't replace proper training.  Focus on doing the work, not on what tool is used.  Watch the behavior of the dog:  is the dog happy, eager to work with this person, and performing well?  Is the owner pleased with the dog's wellbeing and training?  Then I have no complaints.  However, I feel it is my duty to introduce methods and tools that are less aversive, and still accomplish the training goals for the dog efficiently and effectively.
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    Ash Miner is a Certified Trick Dog Instructor, specializes in canine behavior, and holds bachelor's and master's degrees in Music Education & Performance.

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