From Military.com:
“Lawmakers
Push VA to Provide Service Dogs to Vets After a Decade of Failed Efforts”
(A golden
retriever named Bradley lays in shade on porch, June 18, 2014, at his trainers
house in Knoxville, Tennessee. Bradley is being trained to be a service dog
with Smoky Mountain Service Dogs to help assist disabled veterans.)
A measure
reintroduced in the House would order the Department of Veterans Affairs to pay
for and provide service dogs to veterans suffering from mental health issues,
following years of fruitless attempts. The Puppies Assisting Wounded
Servicemembers, or PAWS, Act, introduced by Rep. John Rutherford, R-Fla., would
require the VA to create a grant program to pay for and provide service dogs to
veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health ailments. The
VA covers some costs of service dogs for veterans with certain physical
disabilities, such as blindness, but has never conceded that the animals are
beneficial as a mental health treatment, despite studies showing dog therapy
can be a critical tool for treating such patients. The agency has been
researching the topic for more than a decade. It wrapped up its latest study
last year and found that veterans with service dogs pose a lower risk of
suicide than those with emotional support animals. However, the VA has not yet
released the study publicly. "Research from VA has concluded that service
dogs are a proven therapy for those suffering from PTSD," Rutherford said
at a media event Wednesday.
Service dogs
have formal training and credentialing, as opposed to emotional support
animals, which do not need either. However, VA doctors can designate a
veteran's pet as a support animal, allowing patients to skirt around hurdles from
landlords and breed restrictions in some municipalities. In some cases, it
makes it easier to fly with the animal. The VA tried to study the benefits of
providing service dogs to veterans in 2011, but the effort was halted after two
service dogs bit children in veterans' homes. Further problems with the health
and training of some of the dogs led to a second suspension of the study in
2012, according to the department. This is the fourth time the PAWS Act has
been introduced in some form. It passed the House last year but gained no
traction in the Senate. Lawmakers and advocates have pointed to growing
academic evidence of the benefits of service dogs, including the VA's
unreleased study. That study concedes their usefulness, which could give the effort
momentum. Providing service dogs to veterans is seen by some as a much-needed
alternative therapy amid a widely acknowledged suicide crisis.
Between 2005
and 2018, 89,160 veterans died by suicide, according to the most recent data
from the VA -- more than the number of Americans killed in each major U.S.
conflict except World War II and the Civil War. Despite a seemingly endless
wave of good intentions from Congress and a ballooning VA budget, there's no
evidence the federal government has put a dent into the veteran suicide crisis,
with VA’s data showing little change in the suicide numbers each year. The
agency hasn't announced any new high-profile initiatives, a stark contrast to
the lightning speed with which the Biden administration has tackled other
issues since January. "Frankly, it's comical except it's not funny that
the VA has been studying this issue, thinking about it, pondering over it for a
decade," said Rep. Michael Waltz, R-Fla. "Veterans should have a full
menu of options and different types of therapies, whether that's service dogs,
hyperbaric chambers, or other alternative therapy. We have to get out of this
paradigm of just providing drugs to vets."
The bill would
give grants of up to $25,000 to eligible organizations to provide service dogs
for veterans. K9s for Warriors, a group heavily lobbying for the effort, trains
rescue dogs and matches them to veterans suffering from PTSD. Nonprofits are
one of the only avenues for veterans to adopt service dogs. The VA doesn't
provide any funds for service or emotional support animals but concluded a
congressionally mandated study on the benefits of dogs for PTSD care last July.
One of K9s for Warriors' clients emphasized the importance of service dogs. "When
I came back from Iraq, I found myself with a lot of anxiety and
depression," said Becca Stephens, an Iraq War veteran who was paired with
a dog through the group. "For seven years, I was a full-blown heroin
junkie. ... I often refer it to the greatest dating match-up; since getting Bobi
in 2018, I have been completely sober. She just brings the life out of
me."
^ The VA should
provide service dogs to help Veterans. ^
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