Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
4 Paws for Ability places more than ten types of service dogs with children, adults and veterans with disabilities. Click here to learn more about our service dogs and how to apply.
PAWS Service Dogs are custom-trained to assist people with physical disabilities affecting one or more limbs. Service Dogs can enhance a person’s independence by helping with tasks such as pulling a wheelchair, opening doors, turning light switches on/off or picking up objects as small as a dime.
service dogs for individuals with disabilities. Applicants from the lower 48 United States will be considered, regardless of race, religion, gender or sexual orientation. APPLY NOW.
Canine Companions is a national nonprofit organization, providing service dogs to adults, children and veterans with disabilities and facility dogs to professionals working in healthcare, criminal justice and educational settings.
PAWS custom-trains four types of Assistance Dogs. We train Hearing Dogs, Service Dogs, Seizure Response Dogs, and Service Dogs for Children with Autism.
Since our founding in 1975, Canine Companions has provided over 7,700 service dogs to people with disabilities. We now have six regional training centers and serve people throughout the U.S. Learn More.
Join Canine Companions’ compassionate community of local volunteers. Here, you’ll be an integral part of our mission to enhance the lives of people with disabilities, helping us provide expertly trained service dogs to adults, children, and veterans at no cost.
Adopting a Career Change dog from Service Dogs, Inc. is a rewarding experience, offering a loving home to a lovable, well-trained dog while joining a 36 year legacy of rescue and transformation. Meet Our Career Change Dogs
Since 1989, Canine Support Teams has been providing specially trained service dogs to veterans and persons with disabilities. Each life-changing match is made possible by generous volunteers and donors.
ECAD provides skilled Service Dogs to provide mobility and independence, serving a number of populations including veterans, persons living with disabilities, children as young as two with autism and healthcare facilities.