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This international research project looks at the reliability of canine seizure alerting behaviour in epilepsy patients. In the first stage an international database to identify the size and composition of the population of seizure alerting dogs has been created.
Full description
The size and composition of the population of seizure alerting dogs is still widely unknown, particularly the population of non-trained alerting dogs. Previously published studies have focused on anecdotal reports, single case studies, or small samples of the population. Some studies do not make a clear distinction between response and alert dogs and/or include only one type of alerting dogs. The objective of this study is to create an international alerting dog database including trained Seizure Alert Dogs (SADs), spontaneously alerting Seizure Response Dogs (SRDs) and spontaneously alerting pet dogs. This information will be used to select a representative sample of the population for subsequent work packages and to perform a descriptive analysis of the population of alerting dogs in and international context. For the database, two questionnaires will be developed: one will be directed to SDR and SAD trainers and a second one to epilepsy patients owning a dog.
Questionnaires
The Trainer Questionnaire will be sent to training organisations via email and will request the following information:
The questionnaire directed to epilepsy patients owning dogs will be accessible from our website and will collect the following information:
Recruitment
Collaboration with epilepsy research groups has been stablished inside and outside the EU (Belgium, UK, US, Italy< Germany and Spain).
A systematic online search was performed to identify all SRD and SAD training organisations across the world. These organisations were contacted via email and telephone (see email example document) and asked to participate in the study by completing the trainer questionnaire and by distributing information about the study and an invitation to participate between their clients.
To reach epileptic owners of non-trained dogs that presumably alert, the following organisations were contacted:
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227 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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