Feature

Pups for veterans with PTSD: Biden signs PAWS act into law


 

‘No excuse’

Results from a VA study showed that suicidal ideation was reduced in veterans who were paired with service dogs, compared with veterans paired with emotional support dogs. The study, which was made public in March, found no reduction in overall disability, according to a report by Military.com.

K9s for Warriors cites numerous other studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, that have shown that service dogs reduce PTSD symptoms, especially hypervigilance.

“There really is no excuse not to have the VA engaged in helping veterans suffering from posttraumatic stress who are extremely high risk of suicide to get a lifesaving service dog,” Mr. Diamond said.

His organization has paired 700 veterans suffering from TBI, PTSD, or military sexual trauma with a service dog. The organization provides a 3-week training program for the veteran and his or her dog.

Although about 200 of the graduates have been eligible to receive coverage from the VA for veterinary care for the dogs, it requires a lot of paperwork, and the criteria for who can be certified to receive that benefit are somewhat vague, Mr. Diamond noted.

Under current policy, the dog and veteran must have successfully completed a training program offered by an organization accredited by Assistance Dogs International or the International Guide Dog Federation. The VA does not pay for the training or the dog – which at K9s for Warriors costs about $25,000.

The new pilot program will enable eligible veterans to receive dog training instruction from accredited nonprofit service dog training organizations, and it will give them the opportunity to adopt a dog that they actively assisted in training.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Two key suicide risk factors identified in borderline personality disorder
MDedge Family Medicine
APA, AMA, others move to stop insurer from overturning mental health claims ruling
MDedge Family Medicine
Psychiatric fallout from long-COVID: How to prepare
MDedge Family Medicine
High rates of work-related trauma, PTSD in intern physicians
MDedge Family Medicine
State-of-the-art psych unit designed with recovery in mind
MDedge Family Medicine
Health anxiety common as COVID restrictions loosen
MDedge Family Medicine
Church-based services may help close gaps in mental health care
MDedge Family Medicine
COVID-19, hearings on Jan. 6 attack reignite interest in PTSD
MDedge Family Medicine
The Surfside tragedy: A call for healing the healers
MDedge Family Medicine
Healing Haiti: The emotional trauma of repeat crises
MDedge Family Medicine