From Military.com:
“Bill Would Cover Cost of Service
Dogs for Veterans with PTSD”
Lawmakers and veterans advocacy
groups are ready for change after waiting nearly a decade for the Department of
Veterans Affairs to change its policy on not reimbursing service dogs for
veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The Puppies Assisting
Wounded Servicemembers, or PAWS, Act would require the VA to offer $25,000
vouchers to veterans suffering with PTSD for use at qualifying nonprofits.
Currently, the VA only supports service dogs for use in mobility issues, not in
cases that only involve mental health conditions. In 2010, Congress mandated
the VA study the use of service dogs for PTSD and other mental health problems.
But the pilot was suspended twice when two service dogs bit children and some
dogs experienced health issues. The department has since started the study back
up, but the results won't be published until next year. Now with an estimated
20 veterans committing suicide a day, bill authors Rep. John Rutherford,
R-Florida, and Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Nebraska, are hoping service dogs help
reduce the tragic numbers. "Veterans with PTSD may have left the
battlefield, but they are still in a tough fight," Fischer said in a news
release. "Service dogs can provide support, peace, and joy to these
Americans as they confront the invisible scars of war." These grants would
help expand the reach of nonprofits currently training and connecting service
dogs to veterans with a mental illness, often for free. The act so far has a
bipartisan group of 37 cosponsors. But a similar bill introduced three years
ago didn't get out of committee. For Rory Diamond, CEO of one of the K9 for
Warriors, one of the largest nonprofits that would be affected by this
legislation, it's taken the VA too long to change its policy that "there
is not enough research to know if dogs help treat PTSD and its symptoms." "People
are always asking me what is it the dogs actually do," Diamond said.
"The genius of the dog, or the magic, is it gets the warrior out the front
door. You have a reason to get up in the morning because the dog needs to be
fed and walked." The service dog can also help a veteran feel secure in a
crowd, he added, and help them get a better night's sleep by waking them up at
the first sign of a nightmare. Dogs alone do not necessarily cure veterans, but
recent studies from the Purdue College of Veterinary Medicine and the National
Institutes of Health showed service dogs have had a positive effect. "Now
we have a growing body of research that says the VA needs to do this. That the
dogs are working," said Diamond, whose organization helped with one of the
studies. "We did rigorous studies on our warriors, and it was published in
a prestigious journal, peer reviewed. It's not made-up monkey science. It's
just real science." A VA spokesman said via email the department does not
take positions on research done by groups outside of their purview. "We
strive to complete research at VA according to the highest ethical and
scientific standards with a focus on the safety of Veterans and their
families," the official said. The VA's first report will be released early
summer 2020 and will address whether service dogs or emotional support dogs
helped veterans with PTSD. The second part, to be released about six months
later, will report whether the kind of dog factored into "health economics
savings," which would be factors like reduced hospital stays and reduced
reliance on medication. The VA has not yet taken a position on the PAWS Act. "The
need is so high," Diamond said, "and these dogs are saving lives in
the face of a veteran suicide crisis."
^ I would love to see the VA
expand into paying for service dogs for veterans with PTSD. Sadly, I do not see
that happening anytime soon. The VA seems to only be out to save money rather
than veterans’ lives. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/12/16/bill-would-cover-cost-service-dogs-veterans-ptsd.html
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