TADSAW INC
SAN ANTONIO, TexasThe TADSAW INC mission is to provide for the training of a Medical Alert Service Dog Team, as designated by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990/2010 guidelines, for any wounded Veteran Service Member (Active Duty. Retired, Discharged) surviving with Military Induced Anxiety Depression Syndrome (MIADS), Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Military Sexual Trauma (MST) and/or Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), in order to restore and improve the Veteran’s Quality of Life with a canine ‘Battle Buddy’, at NO CHARGE to the Veteran or the family. And now with child and adolescent suicide becoming an epidemic across the Nation, TADSAW has reintroduced the "Train a Dog - Save a Child/Civilian/Community member" (TADSAC ) program. TADSAW is unique in that it is a Participant Trained Service Dog (PTSD) program - meaning you, the Veteran, are totally involved in the training of your Medical Alert Service Dog and getting your Military Induced Anxiety Depression Syndrome (MIADS) - an Occupation-Related Health Hazard - under control and destigmatizing the medical condition labeled by the Departments of Defense and VA as a mental health/mental illness issue referred to as post traumatic stress disorder (ptsd!!). Fighting Fire with Fire!!! TADSAW/TADSAC is unique in that it is a Participant Trained Service Dog (PTSD) program - meaning you, the client, is totally involved in the training of your Medical Alert Service Dog and getting your specific medical condition, such as Diabetes, Seizures or a Behavioral Acquired Anxiety Depression Syndrome (BAADS) or Autism or whatever - under control and destigmatizing the medical condition as a mental health/mental illness issue.
TWENTY to TWENTY-TWO VETERAN DEATHS DAILY is the current suicide rate for Veterans, as reported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, as documented by only 22 States reporting. In March 2013, the statistic released was TWENTY-TWO Suicides! To date, the VA has not reported or substantiated any significant change to that number. They issued the statement “One Veteran suicide is One TOO many!!!” originally in 2013 and repeated again in 2016. So if One is too many – what is 22???
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