From Military.com:
“Service Dogs Helped Ease PTSD
Symptoms in US Military Veterans, Researchers Say”
Specially trained service dogs
helped ease PTSD symptoms in U.S. military veterans in a small study that the
researchers hope will help expand options for service members. The U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs provides talk therapy and medications to
veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and runs a pilot program involving
service dogs. The VA can prescribe service dogs to certain veterans diagnosed
with a visual, hearing or substantial mobility impairment, including eligible
veterans with PTSD, and will cover some costs associated with having a service
dog. The agency continues to review the research “to evaluate the effectiveness
of service dogs,” said VA press secretary Terrence Hayes, “and we are committed
to providing high-quality, evidence-based care to all those who served.”
Study co-author Maggie O’Haire,
of the University of Arizona’s veterinary college, said one of the researchers'
goals was “to bring evidence behind a practice that appears to be increasingly
popular, yet historically did not have the scientific base behind it." For
the study, service dogs were provided by K9s For Warriors, a nonprofit
organization that matches trained dogs with veterans during a three-week group
class. The dogs are taught to pick up a veteran’s physical signs of distress
and can interrupt panic attacks and nightmares with a loving nudge. Researchers
compared 81 veterans who received service dogs with 75 veterans on the waiting
list for a trained dog. PTSD symptoms were measured by psychology doctoral
students who didn't know which veterans had service dogs. After three months,
PTSD symptoms improved in both groups, but the veterans with dogs saw a bigger
improvement on average than the veterans on the waiting list. The study, funded
by the National Institutes of Health, was published Tuesday in JAMA Network
Open. It wasn't clear from the study whether spending time with any dog would
have had the same effect. (About 40% of the veterans in both groups owned pet
dogs.) And all the veterans in the study had access to other PTSD treatments. Service
dogs should be considered complementary and not a standalone therapy, O'Haire
said. “When you add it to existing medical practices, it can enhance your
experience and reduce your symptoms more,” she said.
PTSD is more common among
veterans than civilians, the VA says, affecting as many as 29% of Iraq war
veterans over their lifetimes. Symptoms include nightmares, flashbacks,
numbness or the feeling of being constantly on edge. "I would wake up in
the middle of the night, almost nightly, in a pool of sweat," said Dave
Crenshaw, who served with the Army National Guard in Iraq and was diagnosed
with PTSD in 2016 while working undercover in law enforcement. Antidepressants
helped with some symptoms, he said, but he still felt numb.
The 41-year-old veteran met his
service dog, a pointer-black lab mix named Doc, in 2019. He immediately felt
what he described as "joy and wholesomeness. It’s just an overwhelming
feeling of ‘Hey, everything’s going to be OK.’” Doc senses when he's upset,
often before he notices himself, and come close, Crenshaw said. Today, Crenshaw
is no longer taking antidepressants and is enjoying retirement from the
military and law enforcement. He gives Doc credit for getting his life back on
track. “It’s the greatest medicine with the least amount of side effects,”
Crenshaw said.
^ The DoD and the VA should
invest more in training and giving Soldiers and Veterans with PTSD Service Dogs
to help them. ^
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