VA drops study of — and funding for — therapy dog programs for vets with PTSD
The Department of Veterans Affairs has dropped its support of pairing service dogs with veterans diagnosed with PTSD — even before completing a three-year study mandated by Congress.
After enrolling fewer than two dozen of a planned 230 dogs in the study — all paired with vets with PTSD — the VA has announced that the study has been suspended, and that, from now on, service dogs will only be paired with veterans with visible disabilities.
The new policy goes into effect today.
For the 400,000 veterans diagnosed as having post-traumatic stress disorder, that means dogs — despite all the positive effects that have been reported — will no longer be part of their treatment and recovery.
Among those blasting the decision is the American Humane Association.
Just days before its second annual celebration of hero dogs, the organization took time to put together a petition, calling on the Department of Veterans Affairs to reverse the new policy.
“Our focus on animal-assisted therapy dates back to 1945 when we promoted therapy dogs as a means to help World War II veterans recover from the effects of war,” the AHA said. ”We know from years of experience that the human-animal bond is a source of powerful healing, whether they are children suffering from cancer or military men and women who have suffered the stress of battle.
“Service dogs, in particular, are an amazing, positive resource for assisting our nation’s best and bravest though their physical pain and mental anguish. We call on the VA and the United States Congress to stand up for our veterans…”
Specifically, the new VA policy ends the program that reimbursed veterans who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder for their use of service dogs while in recovery.
“It’s of the utmost importance that we provide our vets with every option available to treat service related ailments,” said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-NY), who was also shocked to learn of the new policy.
“Especially as the wars are winding down, and more and more soldiers are returning home with mental trauma, the VA must continue to allow their doctors and mental health professionals to provide benefits to veterans who need mental health service dogs,” he said.
Congress mandated that additional scientific study be conducted on the impact of service dogs paired with PTSD vets several years ago. But apparently that study never got off the ground — at least not as ambitiously as planned.
Launched in June 2011, the study planned to follow 230 PTSD vets and their service dogs, tracking them and their families through 2014. Only about a tenth of that number were registered for the study, though.
The study was halted, according to reports, because of concerns about dogs biting children, dirty and cramped living conditions, and faulty record-keeping.
According to the VA, there are about 400,000 veterans currently in treatment for PTSD, and that group has higher than normal rates of divorce, substance abuse, unemployment and suicide. There are 32 to 39 suicide attempts daily among vets with PTSD, about half of which result in death, according to a column by the Chicago Tribune’s Steve Dale.
Dale’s column looks at the benefits of programs such as those provided by Paws for Purple Hearts – an improved quality of life, fewer flashbacks and nightmares. Vets paired with dogs are said to be more likely to find jobs; less likely to become recluses.
“One hallmark of PTSD is avoidance (of going outdoors and socializing with others),” says Robert Porter, executive director 0f Paws for Purple Hearts. “That’s hard to do with a 60-pound dog who just wants to go out and play.”
The study was a chance to prove, beyond the anecdotal, just how much therapy dogs could help vets with PTSD. But, for reasons that make little sense, both the study and the concept were canned.
Most of the dogs in the study were from Guardian Angel Medical Services of Williston, Fla., and its founder and director, Carol Borden, says there were no biting incidents reported.
Borden says that in the organization’s history, veterans with PTSD nearly always benefit from having a dog. Some patients have been able to cut their medication in half, or stop taking it altogether, she said.
That has raised questions among some about whether pharmaceutical companies lobbied for the new VA policy. That’s conjecture, of course — conjecture being something that tends to occur when no logical explanation is given.
The VA owes vets, not to mention Congress, an explanation.
And we all owe veterans afflicted with PSTD a chance to get past it, or at least cope with it. Ruling out dogs and dropping the study is an oath broken, a promising avenue bypassed, and a slap in the face to veterans.
“We’ve not experienced a single suicide attempt as far as we know,” Borden said of vets paired with dogs under the Guardian Angels program. “I have letters from wives thanking us because the husband has returned, and it all happens because of a dog who provides unconditional love.”
Posted by jwoestendiek October 5th, 2012 under Muttsblog.
Tags: aha, american humane association, animals, benefits, ceased, charles schumer, congress, department, disabilities, divorce, dog, dogs, dropped, drug abuse, employment, funding, guardian angel medical services, halted, paws for purple hearts, petition, pets, post traumatic stress disorder, programs, promised, ptsd, ptsd dogs, reimburse, reimbursement, senator, service, study, suicide, terminated, therapy, va, vet, veterans, veterans affairs
Comments
Comment from Karen Taylor
Time October 5, 2012 at 11:41 am
please support our Vets by providing them with a service dog to help them cope with PTSD!
Comment from Steve Brown
Time October 5, 2012 at 11:53 am
Its a no brainer…
Comment from Regina Fox
Time October 5, 2012 at 12:25 pm
Are you kidding me? My husband was deployed over 10 years in the last 19 years and has PTSD ,and I know how hard it is for everyone in the family to deal with this problem. Dogs are wonderful animals which help in so many different ways and anybody who wants to cut this program should be fired. Our soldiers are giving up their freedom, families and way to often their lifes and now that so many of them have mental health problems they are not even worth the chance of getting a service dog? VA..you are disgusting..my husband is almost on his 20 year mark and will retire next spring and we already know that the VA is giving us a hell of a time to give him what he deserves…yes VA, you do have a bad track record but it seems you can top it even more…why dont you pencil pushers go to a war zone for a year and then we talk again..it should be mandetory for every burocrate to servein the military!
Comment from nancy johnson
Time October 5, 2012 at 1:00 pm
Please re-instate the study to pair dogs with Veterans with PTSD. It’s a no brainer
Comment from craycraft j
Time October 5, 2012 at 1:32 pm
we need them bad do not drop the program
Comment from Tomi
Time October 5, 2012 at 2:24 pm
Our VETS deserve the best. The simple companionship of an animal can sometimes be the only bond a veteran suffering with PTSD can really handle. IF OUR PRISONS CAN SEE THE BENEFIT AND SUPPORT CANINE CARE THERAPY–CERTAINLY OUR GOVERNMENT CAN SUPPORT IT FOR OUR VETs!
Comment from Tina
Time October 5, 2012 at 4:53 pm
Service dogs for PTSD sounds like a Win-Win solution.
How can we get this back for our service personnel, pronto!?!?!
Comment from EmilyRay
Time October 6, 2012 at 2:01 pm
I am a disabled veteran with PTSD. I was lucky that my Dr recommended a service dog for me. While I had to do the training myself it has been a life saver. Before Chestnut I would spend a week to three weeks in the hospital every 3 month’s. In the year and a half that I have had her I have only been hospitalized twice for 5 days each time. My quality of life has returned to me. I am thinking about returning to school next year. All of this is because of Chestnut. I take no medications because all of them that I tried just had too many side effects.
Call your senator and Representative and let them know how you feel.
Comment from pman5kmo
Time October 6, 2012 at 3:07 pm
Gotta love when bureaucrats decide on the fate of treatment that has many benefits.
How many children who are bitten by dogs is a result of poor parentage? A bulk majority… I say ban kids from the VA before you ban proven medical treatment…
Comment from Karen
Time October 6, 2012 at 3:26 pm
Once again the VA has let our veterans down. Promises not kept is standard operating procedure for them. I blame the upper echelon of the VA in Washington, DC for the PTSD Service Dog study being cancelled before it was ever started. Now the veterans are left not knowing what to do. Will the vets paired with dogs still continue to receive the dog’s health insurance, dog food, etc. as promised by the VA? I think not. Then there are the veterans on the waiting list who are just left out in the cold. Guardian Angels has committed to helping the veterans with or without the VA. They will continue pairing service dogs and vets. All service dogs are donated to the veterans not sold. Guardian Angels makes this possible through grants and donations. See Guardian Angels Medical Service Dogs web site for more information.
Comment from Adrian Meli
Time October 8, 2012 at 10:05 pm
This does not seem fair to our veterans or all the dogs needing home. It is such an obviously positive program and the therapeutic benefits of dogs have been widely studied and documenting. They clearly made the wrong decision here.
Comment from William Beals
Time October 30, 2012 at 5:22 pm
I’m looking to donate a 8 week old puppy to a Maine Veteran who has PTSD. I have 3 Males and 2 Females left of Chocolate lab pups. I will take care of all cost’s and like to deliver the pup myself. The mother of these pups is my dog, and she has changes my life for the better in many ways. Please e-mail any information if you know someone who quallifies. I will be holding one dog back to hopfully donate to this cause. wbeals@therm-all.com Thanks You



























































Comment from Sue at Talking Dogs
Time October 5, 2012 at 10:34 am
What I’ve got to say about this new VA policy and the suspension of the study cannot be said in public. I’ll leave it at GRRRRRRRRRRR