Abstract

Japan learnt how to promote assistance dogs effectively by deliberating the issues and challenges that surrounded assistance dogs in the USA and Europe and the Act on Assistance Dogs for Physically Disabled Persons was issued in 2002. The aim of this paper is to provide information that may be useful for countries and areas that are seeking ways to regulate assistance dogs, especially in the context of the global problem in which dogs are falsely claimed to assist their partners. First, there is a description of the process through which Japan, where pet dogs have not been accepted in society, established the Act, which overcame the shortcomings of the previous situation. Second, it is shown the ways in which people living with assistance dogs have gained the right to have their dogs accompany them in public. Third, the current challenges faced by people with assistance dogs are documented. Finally, pictures of an example of an assistance dog certificate and of an assistance dog sign reveal how far the regulation of assistance dogs is achieved in Japan.

Highlights

  • The first guide dog was domestically trained in Japan in 1957, 60 years ago [1]

  • This paper describes the process of Japan’s establishment of the Act on Assistance Dogs for Physically Disabled Persons

  • The aim of this paper is to provide information that may be useful for countries and areas that are seeking ways to regulate assistance dogs

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Summary

Introduction

The first guide dog was domestically trained in Japan in 1957, 60 years ago [1]. Training for service and hearing dogs began in the 1990s and 1981, respectively [2, 3]. Japan adopted the philosophy of training dogs and using them to assist people with disabilities from the USA and other European countries. There were many obstacles that were unique to Japan that had to be overcome before assistance dogs could be used in Japan. Japan learnt how to promote assistance dogs effectively by deliberating the issues and challenges that surrounded assistance dogs in the USA and Europe. This is evident through the establishment of the Act on Assistance Dogs for Physically Disabled Persons in Japan on May 22, 2002 [5], whose stated goal was to facilitate the growth of the quality of assistance dogs

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