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Purely Puppy is the perfect blog for puppy parents. It is written by Dr. Lisa Radosta, a board certified veterinary behaviorist in southeastern Florida, who has a great love of dogs, and a special fondness for Rottweilers.

 

Curing Fear with Treats and Love

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February 13, 2013 / (6) comments


Last week, a reader posed the question, how can you help a puppy “that has had a traumatic experience during a fear imprint stage?”

It will depend on the puppy’s genetic predispositions and how traumatic the event was from the puppy’s perspective. My impression from my clinical practice is that many dogs who are exposed to a traumatic event early in life are not permanently scarred. This leads me to believe that many dogs who do succumb to a fear or phobia because of a traumatic event are most likely hereditarily predisposed to this type of emotional behavior. Nonetheless, we don’t have any concrete evidence to prove that point at this time.

 

What constitutes a traumatic event? It could be something as simple as prolonged separation from you, her owner. It could be a surgery, a bite from another dog, or a frightening encounter with a child. The trauma is in the eye of your puppy. The best way to understand the puppy’s perception of what happened is to read her body language. If she displays fearful body language, she could well be traumatized by the experience.

Observe how long it takes for her to recover from the trauma. If she has recovered immediately as the stimulus (person, animal, or thing) has backed off or disappeared, she is likely not traumatized by the situation. If she is trembling 10 minutes afterward, reacts extremely when back in the same situation, or displays fear when she is exposed to the environment where she was initially scared without the actual stimulus present, that experience has caused her trauma and her future behavior will most likely be shaped by it.

So, what to do?

 

Take it slow.

Forcing her to be in environments and with stimuli that scare her without control over those stimuli will not make her better. It will make her worse.

 

Get organized.

Make a list of what frightens your dog. Include locations and stimuli. You should work through each of those stimuli methodically.

 

Find your dog’s currency.

Use what your dog loves most to encourage and reward bravery.

 

Desensitize.

Expose her to what frightens her at a level at which she is not scared. Then, as she succeeds at that level, you can increase the level of the stimulus to increase her threshold or tolerance for the scary thing. Don’t move the stimulus closer until she is completely successful at a lower level.

 

Counter condition.

Pair something great with the scary stimulus. Take something you know that she loves and reward her generously with that special treat or toy when she is exposed to what scares her.

 

 

What I have written above sound pretty easy right? Then why do so many people fail at this procedure? The most common mistake is moving too quickly or forcing the dog to tolerate something in the hopes that she will adjust. That is called flooding. Flooding is a procedure where the puppy is exposed to the full strength stimulus instead of slow exposure.

Imagine that you are afraid of spiders. Which procedure below would help you get over your fear?
 

  1. You are tied to a chair and a box of spiders is dumped on top of you (flooding).

  2. You are sitting in a chair and every second you are handed $100 as you look at a box of spiders about 50 feet away. Each day, the box is moved one foot closer to you while those $100 bills just keep a comin’ (desensitization and counter conditioning).


Of course you chose “B,” and your puppy would too! It may be sounding pretty simple about now, but it can take many months to get through this procedure. You have to bring patience to the table as well.

If your pup has been traumatized and her behavior is changed by it, now is the time to act. Don’t wait. As she develops she will be most amenable to turning back the hands of time.

 

 

 

Dr. Lisa Radosta

 

 

Image: aspen rock / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (6)
1
Spiders!
by TheOldBroad on 02/13/2013 06:02pm

As one who is terrified of even the tiniest of spiders, your example makes great sense.

Do you find that a lot of humans kind of have the attitude of "Get Over It!" when it comes to fearful dogs and that flooding is what happens most frequently?

As with anything, pertaining to training critters, it takes time and patience. Sounds like helping them overcome fear (or terror as the case may be) should be taken even more slowly.

by Dr. Lisa Radosta on 02/24/2013 06:18pm

Yes, I find that flooding is actually very frequent. It generally makes dogs much worse so I recommend against it.

2
Curing Fear with Treats
by Patty Mullins on 02/13/2013 06:51pm

I so thank you for this article, I have a little Foster dog that w/o meaning to I scared him, we were coming in from potty I have a metal porch roof and every morning toss peanuts to the blue jays well w/o thinking tossed them up on their the pup was on the porch the noise scared him so bad he was shaking. I felt terrible and he has been frightened to go out since. Every time he goes on the porch to go potty I reward him both ways with a favorite treat & so much praise but wasn't sure if that was what I should do reading this I know I am on the right track. Thank you for posting this!

3
Thank you!
by Matt McTighe on 02/15/2013 01:52pm

I really appreciate you taking the time to write this great article (I am the one who posed the fear-imprint question). This helps so much. I know I am not alone in this and I think your reminder to TAKE IT SLOW and not "flood" is what many of us need to hear. I did start to take it much slower and the response has been MUCH better. Thank you again! This blog is awesome! :)

by Dr. Lisa Radosta on 02/24/2013 06:19pm

I'm glad I could help! Keep those ideas for blogs coming!

4
by PuppyToyShop on 03/11/2013 07:17pm

Couldn't agree with you more regarding fearfulness! It happens every year come 5th Novemeber and Guy Fawkes Night here in the UK which is basically a massive barrage of fireworks.

I usually find rewarding her with her favorite puppy toy and ignoring her when she panics usually does the trick. Comforting and giving her attention as she starts to panic only makes her worse in my opinion almost like telling her its okay to panic. Whereas ignoring the panic and eventually distracting with a play does not encourage her to continue

Keep up the great blog!

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ABOUT PURELY PUPPY

LISA RADOSTA, DVM, DACVB

Photo of Lisa Radosta

…is a board certified veterinary behaviorist. Haven’t ever heard of one? You’re in good company, because many people don’t know they exist. After all, there are only 54 of them. After veterinary school at the University of Florida and some time in primary care practice, Dr. Radosta completed a 3-year residency in behavioral medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. She treats dogs, cats and birds with serious behavior problems, like aggression, separation anxiety, elimination outside of the litter box, and storm phobia. But please don’t ask her if dogs lie on a couch and bark at her!

She spends her off time writing textbook chapters and articles for veterinarians and clients, as well as lecturing nationally and internationally. Oh, yeah - she is also an overscheduled, stressed, tired, working mom. If you are itching to know lots more about her, go to her website at www.flvetbehavior.com, and join her weekly for your puppy fix.

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