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Chapitre 5 · Version 1.0 · En vigueur le 4 juillet 2026

Allergen Detection

SPTCS · Version 1.0 · Discipline: Allergen Detection Service Dog

La norme est rédigée et tenue à jour en anglais, sa langue de référence.

The dog detects trace amounts of a specific allergen (most commonly peanut, tree nut, egg, dairy, gluten, shellfish) in food and objects, and communicates the find with a passive trained indication — allowing a handler with a severe (often anaphylactic) allergy to avoid exposure.

The three-test protocol in §5.5 is the canonical Service Paws allergen assessment. It predates this manual and is preserved as the standard used for all certified allergen dogs.


5.1 Certifiable tasks

TaskTriggerStandard
Controlled product/food check Cue ("check") on a presented itemClear passive indication if target odour present; clear "all clear" behaviour (disengage/return) if absent
Room / area searchCue, systematic searchLocates accessible target-odour sources in the area within the time standard
Trained indicationOdour findPassive, unambiguous, non-destructive (e.g., nose press to handler's leg or arm, sit-and-stare); must not touch/damage the item
Refusal of unchecked food (recommended)Food offered/reachableDoes not take food not released by handler (overlaps PAT P10/P14)

5.2 Candidate suitability

  • Strong food/toy drive convertible to search motivation; sound-stable per Chapter 1.
  • No chronic nasal/respiratory disease (§1.2).
  • Any size; small-to-medium dogs often suit table-level and travel work well.

5.3 Training methodology requirements

  • Odour imprinting on the verified target allergen using clean-sample protocol: target samples prepared and stored in dedicated airtight containers; separate tongs/gloves per sample class; hot and blank containers never share storage or handling.
  • Blank and distractor training from the start: unscented containers, non-target foods, and packaging materials, so the dog learns the odour — not the container, the routine, or the handler's expectation.
  • Passive indication selected and fixed early. Vocal or destructive indications are not certifiable.
  • Handler-blind sessions must be part of training (a third party places samples) to prevent unintentional cueing before the blind test.
  • Handler safety protocol: the allergic handler never handles hot samples; during training/testing involving the handler, sealed secondary containment and a second person managing samples are required. For anaphylactic handlers, emergency medication must be on site through all hot-sample work.

5.4 Live exposure log (recommended)

A dated log of real-world checks (item, result, outcome) is recommended for the dog's file — it supports attestation letters and re-assessment decisions.

5.5 Task test — the Service Paws allergen protocol

All three tests are scored by the assessor; samples are placed by someone other than the handler. Tests 1–2 are typically conducted on one day; Test 3 in real public venues on a separate day.

Test 1 — Controlled test

  • 15 presentations, of which 5 contain no trace of the allergen (blanks), presented in randomized order at 5-minute intervals to prevent cross-contamination or confusion.
  • The dog must show its clear, trained indication when the allergen is detected, and respond within 60 seconds of presentation.
  • No failed presentations across all 15 (a miss on a hot item or an indication on a blank is a failure).
  • An item may be re-presented to the dog, but no more than 3 total attempts on that item.

Test 2 — Room search

  • A room free of other allergen sources is prepared with 3 scented items of varying intensity: a large allergen-containing food source; a medium source; and a small trace affixed to a tap or a piece of paper. All placed so scent can escape.
  • The team has 15 minutes to locate all 3 items.

Test 3 — Public product check (grocery store + restaurant)

Conducted with real-world distractions, with precautions preventing handler exposure.

Grocery store:

  • Seven items pulled from shelves for the dog to check — food, cleaning supplies, toys, dishes, or hygiene products.
  • At least two items contain the allergen, confirming correct indication.
  • The dog's indication and all-clear behaviour must not damage products.
  • A false alert on an allergen-free product is tolerated in this environment only if, on re-presentation, the dog gives 3 consistent indications in a row (treated as a find for scoring).
  • The dog must not "free-indicate" on shelf products — only on the controlled search.
  • The dog must remain focused and responsive; if distracted, the handler must refocus the dog within 1 minute.

Restaurant:

  • Three dishes are presented, one containing the allergen; the dog must correctly indicate the hot dish.
  • No spilling or mess during indication or all-clear behaviour.
  • The dog stays calm and controlled throughout a full meal.

Pass: Test 1 clean (within the re-presentation rule) + all 3 items found in Test 2 within time + Test 3 completed with correct indications and conduct as above.

5.6 Maintenance

  • Weekly odour refreshers with verified samples; monthly blank sessions to keep the false-alert rate honest.
  • Samples refreshed regularly; expired or contaminated sample stock discarded.
  • Recommended annual re-run of Test 1 (informal, logged) to confirm detection reliability.

5.7 Records for this chapter

Scoresheet (Ch. 16) for Tests 1–3 with dates and venues; sample-handling notes (who placed, blind status); video when overseen remotely. On pass, Service Paws records the task testing date.