After Duty, Dogs Suffer Like Soldiers
Bryce Harper for The New York Times
Dereck Stevens bonds with his military working dog before a practice drill at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.
Dereck Stevens bonds with his military working dog before a practice drill at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.
By JAMES DAO
NYT
SAN ANTONIO — The call came into the behavior specialists here from a doctor in Afghanistan. His patient had just been through a firefight and now was cowering under a cot, refusing to come out.
Apparently even the chew toys hadn’t worked.
Post-traumatic stress disorder, thought Dr. Walter F. Burghardt Jr., chief of behavioral medicine at the Daniel E. Holland Military Working Dog Hospital at Lackland Air Force Base. Specifically, canine PTSD.
If anyone needed evidence of the frontline role played by dogs in war these days, here is the latest: the four-legged, wet-nosed troops used to sniff out mines, track down enemy fighters and clear buildings are struggling with the mental strains of combat nearly as much as their human counterparts.
(More here.)
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