• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

  • Client Services Login
  • Current Volunteers

Can Do Canines Assistance Dogs logo

Our Dogs Fetch Amazing Things

  • Our Dogs
          • Assistance Dogs
            • Mobility Assist Dogs
            • Autism Assist Dogs
            • Seizure Assist Dogs
            • Diabetes Assist Dogs
            • Hearing Assist Dogs
            • Facility Dogs
          • How to Apply
            • Assistance Dog FAQs
            • Is an Assistance Dog Right for You?
          • Journey of a Can Do Canine
          • Where Our Dogs Come From
          • Career-Changed Dogs
  • Get Involved
          • Volunteer
            • Dog Hosting Opportunities
            • Campus, Event, and Remote Opportunities
          • Buy Merchandise
          • Spread the Word
          • Donate
            • Sustaining Monthly Gifts
            • Estate and Planned Giving
            • Workplace Giving
            • More Ways to Give
            • Wish Lists
          • Events
            • Fetching Ball Gala
            • Can Do Woofaroo
            • Open House
            • Graduation
  • About
          • About Us
          • Our Humans
          • Our Story
          • Our WAG Center
          • Prison Puppy Program
          • Careers
          • Our Finances & Annual Report
            • Charitable Organization Registration Compliance
          • News
            • Newsletter Archive
          • FAQs for Medical Professionals
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Our Dogs
          • Assistance Dogs
            • Mobility Assist Dogs
            • Autism Assist Dogs
            • Seizure Assist Dogs
            • Diabetes Assist Dogs
            • Hearing Assist Dogs
            • Facility Dogs
          • How to Apply
            • Assistance Dog FAQs
            • Is an Assistance Dog Right for You?
          • Journey of a Can Do Canine
          • Where Our Dogs Come From
          • Career-Changed Dogs
  • Get Involved
          • Volunteer
            • Dog Hosting Opportunities
            • Campus, Event, and Remote Opportunities
          • Buy Merchandise
          • Spread the Word
          • Donate
            • Sustaining Monthly Gifts
            • Estate and Planned Giving
            • Workplace Giving
            • More Ways to Give
            • Wish Lists
          • Events
            • Fetching Ball Gala
            • Can Do Woofaroo
            • Open House
            • Graduation
  • About
          • About Us
          • Our Humans
          • Our Story
          • Our WAG Center
          • Prison Puppy Program
          • Careers
          • Our Finances & Annual Report
            • Charitable Organization Registration Compliance
          • News
            • Newsletter Archive
          • FAQs for Medical Professionals
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
Home / News / Living Life Safely, Confidently and Happily

Living Life Safely, Confidently and Happily

October 27, 2015

Alan and Oz - Wall-HLAlan Burggraf & Diabetes Assist Dog Oz

“Diabetes runs through my family,” Alan Burggraf explains. “My grandmother had it—even my first cousin had it.”

So when Alan of Coon Rapids, Minn. was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 14, it didn’t come as a big surprise. He says his parents could even tell he had the disease before he went to the doctor.

But the last 44 years with the disease have taken its toll. Alan has developed diabetic neuropathy in his hands and is now unable to work.

 “It gets worse every year,” Alan says. “My blood sugar can drop without notice. I check my blood sugar ten times a day in order to avoid unsafe levels. Sometimes I can feel when my blood sugar is too low, but sometimes I cannot.”

Coincidentally in 2011, Alan’s daughter, Jessica, helped organize a fashion show to benefit Can Do Canines. After she learned how an assistance dog could be trained to help someone with diabetes, Jessica encouraged her father to apply.

“I think a dog could save my life someday,” Alan wrote in his application to Can Do Canines. “My daughters are very worried about my control over my diabetes and we would all greatly appreciate any help you could give us.”

Help finally came in the form of a Diabetes Assist Dog named Oz. The two-year-old black Labrador retriever is  trained to detect a change in the scent of Alan’s breath when his blood sugar levels drop low. He alerts Alan with a nudge of his nose or by placing his paws on Alan’s legs or lap. While this may sound like an impossible task for a dog to learn, Alan says the training process went quite smoothly.

“It went easier than I expected,” he remembers. “Oz is such a smart dog. The trainers taught me so much about dogs that I never knew—even after being a lifelong dog owner.”

Oz’s skills and presence have not only helped Alan feel safer, but they’ve provided peace of mind for his family as well.

“It’s not just all on me now,” says Alan. “I have another shoulder to lean on—someone to help me.”

Being near Oz is a good thing for Alan and he’s already been helped before problems start. One day, Alan was in the garage and Oz could sense trouble, so he retrieved Alan’s emergency bag equipped with soda and a candy bar.

“We had just trained Oz to retrieve the bag the day before,” remembers Alan. “I was in the garage working and he started alerting me—two or three times. I thought, ‘I better go test.’ So I come into the house and the dog was right behind me with the bag in its mouth. That was superb.”

Diabetes is an invisible disease, and Alan wants puppy raisers and donors to know that their gift is life-changing.

“Most people think about assistance dogs for people with physical disabilities,” says Alan. “I’m so grateful what you guys do for people like me. It’s just overwhelming.”

Thank you to all those who made this partnership possible:

Puppy Raiser—The Inmate Handlers at the Minnesota Correctional Facility at Faribault
Long-term Foster Homes—The Doyle Family

Previous Post: « I Love Lucy
Next Post: Renewed Independence »

Footer

Can Do Canines Assistance Dogs oval logo

Phone iconContact Us

763-331-3000
info@candocanines.org

Map iconLocation

9440 Science Center Drive
New Hope, Minnesota 55428
Directions
Assistance Dogs International Accredited Member websiteCandid. Platinum Transparency 2024 logo  Charities Review Council Meets Standards website

© 2025 Can Do Canines. All Rights Reserved.Contact Us  |  Careers  |  Press Kit  | Accessibility Statement  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map

Love reading about my friends?

yellow Lab dog wearing a service dog cape and smiling at camera

 

 

 

 

Subscribe to our e-newsletter