Therapy dogs help relieve stress around Kern County

April 6, 2020

Nobody is excited to visit the dentist’s office.

The very thought of going to the dentist’s office can send just about anyone into a panic attack. There is an individual who has made it his mission to relieve some of the fear of a routine checkup.

Hugo, a maltipoo, is afraid of just about everything except for humans. When someone visits Dr. Reza Moghbel’s office, Hugo is the first to greet them. When patients are getting a cleaning, a root canal or before surgery, Hugo is there to be pet and to relax them.

“He’s the most popular in the office and I’m the least popular,” Moghbel said.

Hugo originally was an emotional support dog for Parisa Reyhanian, the business manager for Moghbel’s office, but gradually became a therapy dog for the office. His friendly demeanor is what makes him the ideal dog to help out during stressful scenarios.

“With the patient’s permission, Hugo will jump on their lap and so long as he is pet, he’ll stay for hours,” Reyhanian said. “Patients start to focus on him instead of the procedure.”

Hugo is just one of the many therapy dogs working in Kern County.

Therapy dogs volunteer everywhere from schools to juvenile halls to hospices with the goal to improve people’s lives. Not to be confused with service dogs, therapy dogs aren’t trained to assist people with disabilities. Therapy dogs don’t have the same access privileges in public places and have to be invited to visit, said Torie Beck, program coordinator with Miracle Mutts, an American Kennel Club-certified program offered by Marley’s Mutts that trains dogs to be therapy dogs.

Beck said that the number of therapy dogs has risen in recent years.

“We have high-stress lives,” Beck said. “Life is full of high-stress situations and dogs help relieve some of that. People in Bakersfield care about their animals. They are seen as part of our families.”

In a 2019 review in Circulation, a journal of the American Heart Association, 4 million people in the United States, Canada, Scandinavia, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand were surveyed to reveal that dog ownership was associated with a 24 percent reduction in all-cause mortality.

Miracle Mutts aims to creative positive experiences with trained dogs. The organization takes canines through up to 50 public visits to get used to working with people. Those outings include Barks and Books, where dogs serve as nonjudgmental reading partners for children to read aloud to at Beale Memorial and other county libraries.

“A therapy dog goes into the community to make people happy,” said volunteer Bernadette Ferguson. “They have to be really nice and have to enjoy the work to be a therapy dog.”

Ferguson brings her two Pomeranians to different programs, each with different audiences but her dogs always know how to handle being the life of a gathering. It can take up to a year for a dog to be certified to work as a therapy dog, she said.

“Each setting is different,” Ferguson said. “My girls are well-liked at retirement communities. It’s great to see them light up when they get to hold them.”

Some therapy dogs have an almost celebritylike status. Helix, a pit bull, has garnished a following on his Instagram page, The Helix Project. Owner Mary Higgins adopted him after he was in a program in North Kern State Prison to become a certified Canine Good Citizen. Now, Helix visits juvenile hall twice a month and works as a therapy dog wherever he is needed. The Helix Project is, in part, an excuse to show the dog in increasingly adorable situations and it also serves as a way to dispel any misconceptions there could be about the nature of pit bulls.

“The kids at the juvenile hall think it’s so cool that a pit bull is there,” Higgins said. “They ask if he would protect me from people. I laugh and say, ‘No, because he’s so sweet.’ You look inside his eyes and they are just full of love.”

  • Most Recent News

    Former Victoria man’s diabetic alert dog helps him get back to life

    June 2, 2021

    When Luke Hengen’s diabetes worsened in his early twenties, it stripped him of the outdoor activities where the country kid felt at home. Countless wilderness adventures and years of hard-fought football games took a toll on his body, to the point where he could no longer sense when his blood sugar was too high or […]

    Read more

    Students Get Therapy Dog

    January 8, 2021

    When middle school students return to class on Jan. 11, they’ll find a new face at the door: Daisy. Daisy is a therapy dog and the personal pet of Rob Kreger, principal of the Rock L. Butler Middle School. The five-year-old golden retriever is not a school pet or mascot, but rather a working dog […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dogtor

    January 8, 2021

    Last March, Caroline Benzel, a third-year medical student, began to notice the stress and discomfort her nurse friends were feeling from the pressures of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. “[Personal protective equipment] can be really rough on the skin,” Benzel, 31, tells PEOPLE. Benzel and her 3-year-old Rottweiler, Loki (who’s also a therapy dog) hatched a […]

    Read more

    Therapy Dog Pups

    January 8, 2021

    When Stanley the miniature fox terrier’s owner passed away, the little dog started a ‘paw-some’ new role – bringing puppy love to some of the Gold Coast’s oldest residents. After Carinity Cedarbrook Diversional Therapist Julianne Staff adopted Stanley, he began visiting the aged care community at Mudgeeraba as a therapy dog. Therapy dogs help to […]

    Read more

    Puppy Cams

    January 7, 2021

    A nonprofit is providing an unusual form of therapy for those on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic – puppy cams! “You spend five minutes with a puppy and try not to smile,” said registered nurse Robin Lingg Lagrone. Lingg Lagrone says watching little furballs wag their tails and prance on their paws helps […]

    Read more

    Pet Committee

    January 7, 2021

    When Moore County’s school doors were abruptly closed earlier in 2020, two- and four-legged volunteers from the Moore County Citizens’ Pet Responsibility Committee (PRC) were in their 12th year of presenting a six-session Pet Responsibility Education Program for fourth-graders. The PRC quickly shifted gears and placed its program materials online as part of a home […]

    Read more

    The Right Rescue Dog

    January 7, 2021

    If your New Year’s resolution is to add a canine family member, good for you. Somewhere out there is the perfect puppy or adult dog for your family. You have a lot of things to think about when you begin to look for that new family member, puppy or dog? Large or small? Purebred or […]

    Read more

    Police Dog Attack

    January 7, 2021

    A resolution headed to the Duluth City Council on Monday could put to rest a lawsuit filed by Teri Lynn Ehlers, an employee of the Patch Motel, who was bitten by a Duluth police dog named Oakley. Former Duluth Police Officer Marc Johnson was a registered guest of the Warroad establishment May 28, 2018, when […]

    Read more

    PAWS With A Cause

    January 7, 2021

    Pebble Hill Plantation and the Thomas County Public Library are pleased to announce the upcoming Enlightening Bites program, “PAWS With a Cause,” on Friday, January 8, 2021 at noon in the Flipper Room of the Library. The program is being presented by Jeri Anderson, field representative. Anderson is recently retired from the City of Monticello, […]

    Read more

    Police Canine Team

    January 7, 2021

    Kingston Police revealed in a news release late Wednesday afternoon that they’ve been keeping a four-legged secret for roughly three months. The force announced it added a second canine unit, with the arrival of police service dog Dak this past October. He is working with Const. Jeff Dickson, while police service dog Bask is working […]

    Read more

    More Recent News