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04/20/09

She’s A Diva
Horst Hoefinger

Here’s a great story, once again showing dogs really are man’s best friend. Or in this case a 12-year-old girl’s best friend.

Hunter now has her very own Diva living in the house with her, not just any Diva, this one is a diabetes service dog.

Diva is amazing at what she does, usually detecting both lows and highs before any symptoms occur. She’s even been known to bring Hunter or her parents a test kit in her mouth if that’s what it takes to get someone’s attention. That’s a blessing because Hunter can get flu-like symptoms, including stomach aches and migraines when her blood sugar is high or headaches and the shakes when it’s low.

It was Donna, who came up with the idea of bringing a service dog into the family. Her rationale was that if police dogs could be trained to pick up the scent of explosives, then dogs should also be able to differentiate someone’s breath and other scents, explaining that diabetics can have a fruity breath smell, a symptom of high blood sugar. “I wasn’t sure if anything like that existed,” she explains. After much research, Donna found that such diabetes service dogs did, in fact, exist in the form of Beverly Swartz and her company, All Purpose Canines, which specializes in placing services dogs with both diabetic and autistic children. The demand for these dogs has been so huge, in fact, that the company has had to stop accepting applications temporarily for diabetic service dogs because of the big wait list and the more rigorous training involved. “Beverly made it very clear that the training took a long time, that there was a lot of care involved with the dogs and that the dog and child had to be matched up if it was going to work,” Donna said.

Nevertheless, they made the trip to South Dakota to meet Diva, who has changed their lives, and ironically, was born on the same day that Hunter was diagnosed. How’s that for “kismet!” “Diva was very quick in catching on to my certain scents,” Hunter said. “When I first saw her, immediately, she was alerting and running all over the place, trying to tell someone that I was ‘high.’” Beverly added that Diva even alerted on the plane on the way back to Florida.

Read Hunter and Diva’s full story on The Huffington Post, it’s written by Carrie Pollare who is the owner of the company that sells “I’m Tired Of...” bracelets.  It’s jewelry for a cause,  when you buy an “I’m Tired of Diabetes” bracelet half of the money goes to the Diabetes Research Institute which is working to find a cure.

* Pic of Diva and Hunter courtesy The Huffington Post
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4 Woofs

  1. Jaime

    Great story! Thanks for sharing this happy ending with us all :0

  2. Frank

    Touching story – it’s amazing how helpful & smart dogs are!!! There’s also a story about dogs being used to smell cancer in humans – wonderful and almost unbelievable, bu 100% true.

    Check out my pooches on my My.Arfie.com page – http://my.arfie.com/profile/FrankTorres

    Also if any of you don’t know – you can be hlping pooches while you search on Dogpile.com – they’ve donated more than $200,000 to the ASPCA in 2009 alone.

    Gotta do what we can for free in this nasty economy,

    Frank

  3. Randee Baron

    I keep trying to leave a note on the page to win a portrait of my dog but it isn’t working. Hopefully you will see this and consider it an entry.
    I don’t have my dog yet, but the one I am falling in love with is a lhasa apso that is (from the pics I have seen) almost reddish in color. i am a picture/portrait fanatic (just ask my 10 year old daughter who has to put up with my incessent capturing of everything she does. I am really hoping things go thru with this dog. I have gotten some negative comments from friends and family, so am relying mostly on myself to know that is the way to go. I have been med resistant (10 years of pretty much any med you can think of) and am hoping that a dog will really be soemthing that will make a difference. So, there is my entry, hope it makes it in even tho I couldn’t do it on the portrait page.

  4. fricknfarms

    You know, FINALLY people are beginning to realize the benefits of utilizing the dog’s super senses. Think about it, dogs are predators, is it really so surprising they can spot the “weakest” in the herd? It only makes sense that dogs can “sniff” out diseases. It is just plain logical.

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