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Doggedly serving Veterans

The veteran kneels next to her service dog.
Renè Toney, an Army Veteran kneels beside her service animal, Jackson, a Labrador Retriever, during a midday break on July 10th at the Coatesville VA Medical Center.
By Michael Hamill, Public Affairs Specialist

After decades of avoiding facing the traumatic events she experienced in Kuwait and treating her post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with a medication-only treatment plan, this Veteran lost her job, her partner, and nearly lost her home and her life.

Renè Toney separated from the Army after 13 years of service. During a deployment to Kuwait, she was triaging enemy prisoners of war when the events that caused her trauma occurred. For years she was regularly triggered by sundown and relived her experience when the sun began to set. 

Confronting trauma
These days Toney finds herself doing the hard work she spent so many years avoiding through Prolonged Exposure therapy with support from a yellow Labrador Retriever, Jackson; her service dog by her side.  

Prolonged Exposure is a psychotherapy also known as talk therapy used to decrease PTSD symptoms by gradually approaching trauma-related memories that a Veteran has been avoiding. 

“The first time you do Prolonged Exposure is very, very emotionally overwhelming.” The therapy sessions can arouse Toney’s PTSD. 

Service Animals
Service dogs are trained to identify the Veteran’s unique stressors and disrupt the symptoms before they escalate any further. Jackson’s service supports Toney's daily life while she is out in public, at home in bed, and during therapy sessions where Toney is now facing her PTSD.

When a session triggers a flashback Toney is unaware of anything happening around her. Jackson will instantly go from laying on the floor to being pressed up against her and will remain by her side. “When it’s all over and you sort of come out of that imaginary process, he's there.” 

“Jackson does an enormous amount for me in terms of panic and anxiety attacks. He will let me know long before I know that a panic attack or an anxiety attack is coming.” Jackson, who is trained to the Americans with Disabilities Act standards, will lean hard into Toney. “He will not leave that position until that attack is done. And even though I may not feel it anymore, it's not done until he knows it's done.”

On call 24/7
Jackson is on call for Toney 24/7 but he is not on duty every minute of the day. “When his vest is on, he is locked in on me and whatever it is I need.” 

During downtime he gets to take the vest off, his favorite word and his favorite game is frisbee. “He will run a frisbee until you do not throw it anymore.” Toney makes sure he gets to play as often as she can.

“His service is a very real service. He works really hard. I'm blessed and thankful because otherwise, my life would be very different, and my world would be much smaller.”

Veterans who are ready to face the trauma behind their PTSD can get help in finding a therapist or review self-help and coping tools to manage stress. 

If you are experiencing a crisis, call the Veterans Crisis Line at 988 and then press 1 to speak with a responder qualified to support Veterans or text 838255.