From the AFT:
“A VA hospital barred a
veteran’s service dog. After the vet’s suicide, it changed its policy”
In the wake of a veteran’s death
by suicide, a tragedy preceded by missed appointments due to the veteran’s
service dog being denied entry to the VA hospital, the Department of Veterans
Affairs Office of the Inspector General issued recommendations to two VA
facilities to improve care for mental health patients. One of those
recommendations was to nix prohibitive service dog policies. Previously, the VA
Palo Alto Healthcare System required service dogs to complete a health
screening, be trained in three assistance tasks, and wear identification. But
VHA’s policy does not permit facility staff to require health screenings or
identification, according to the VAOIG’s report.
The report, published Sept. 23,
details a case of an unidentified veteran’s death by suicide after receiving
services through VA facilities in Portland, Oregon and Palo Alto, California.
Though the report notes that staff made a reasonable effort to provide most
aspects of mental health care to the patient, who was showing signs of suicidal
ideation, it states that the facilities in question failed to meet some of the
policies required by the Veterans Health Administration. The policies that
staff fell short on included providing various suicide-prevention care and
mental health treatment options, and not allowing the patient’s service dog to
enter the facility. The patient was assessed as being at high risk for suicide,
and objected to attending certain appointments without the service dog. The
Palo Alto VA facility imposed service dog requirements that were stricter than
VHA’s official service dog policy, VAOIG found. The VAOIG report states that
“failure to comply with VHA animal access policy may contribute to barriers in
accessing VHA services for patients with service animals.”
The patient had told the facility
that the 11-year-old service dog was their only support system. Following the
investigation, VAOIG issued seven recommendations to improve training,
coordination, policy, and procedures related to mental health care at both
facilities. Officials at both facilities concurred on all applicable
recommendations, which included developing procedures consistent with the VHA’s
behavioral report procedures, improving and expediting communication of key
information with both patients and leadership, and monitoring staff for
compliance to VHA policies, among others. A final recommendation pushed the
Palo Alto facility to update its service dog policy to match the VHA’s, which
the facility concurred with and provided a completion date of May 2021.
Veterans experiencing a mental
health emergency can contact the Veteran Crisis Line at 1-800-273-8255 and
select option 1 for a VA staffer. Veterans, troops or their family members can
also text 838255 or visit VeteransCrisisLine.net for assistance.
^ The VA failed this Veteran and
their failure led to his suicide. ^
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