Why
therapists shouldn’t approve patients’ emotional support animals
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[June 03, 2017]
By Lisa Rapaport
(Reuters Health) - A growing number of therapists are certifying their
patients’ pets as emotional support animals, allowing people to bring
their cats, pigs and birds on planes and into rental homes even though
it may not be medically necessary, a recent study suggests.
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Researchers asked 87 mental health professionals to review current
laws and policies for determining when animals may quality as
emotional support animals in the U.S., including federal
transportation requirements for air travel. Then, researchers
questioned these professionals about how support animals should be
certified.
Overall, about 31 percent of the survey participants said they had
previously recommended emotional support animals for people.
However, 36 percent of them said they didn’t feel qualified to do
make these recommendations, including two practitioners who had done
so in the past.
Study co-author Jeffrey Younggren of the University of Missouri
explained the difference between service animals and emotional
support animals.
“Service animals are formally trained to perform specific healthcare
duties/function and their training matches the patients’ needs and
they are not considered pets,” he told Reuters Health by email.
“This is a formal process.”
“However, emotional support animals do not have any training
requirements under the law nor are these certifications limited to
dogs,” Younggren said. “Ducks, turkeys and potbelly pigs have all
been certified by somebody as emotional support animals.”
Federal and state laws regulating emotional support animals (ESAs)
often are convoluted and constantly changing, Younggren and his
colleagues note in a report of their study, which is scheduled for
publication in the journal Professional Psychology: Research and
Practice.
For example, landlords who normally prohibit pets must allow ESAs
and waive any fees or pet deposits.
Airlines are required to allow ESAs to accompany their owners in the
main cabins of aircraft.
The mental health professionals in the survey believed certifying
emotional support animals can sometimes be appropriate, the survey
found.
But to sidestep potential legal and ethical problems, clinicians
should not certify animals for patients they are already treating,
the researchers argue. Mental health professionals who work in
courts of law and who don’t have a prior relationship with a patient
may be better able to make an impartial decision on whether an
emotional support animal might actually benefit that person.
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These evaluations should be done with the same thoroughness and
impartiality that is found in evaluations for any disability, the
researchers also argue. This may require the development of
professional guidelines for what assessments are done, who conducts
them and how they are completed.
Many mental health professionals may not understand that a conflict
of interest exists when a patient asks for an animal to be certified
because they want to make the patient satisfied and keep the patient
engaged in therapy, said Dr. Paul Cherniack, a researcher at the
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine who wasn’t involved in
the study.
Another issue is that clinicians may rely on subjective reports from
patients about how animals help them, especially in the absence of
objective ways to measure the therapeutic benefits of these animals,
Cherniack said by email.
“I believe there is no evidence yet that emotional support animals
benefit people’s health,” Cherniack said. “Other service animals
like seeing eye dogs are different.”
While better guidelines and standards for certifying emotional
support animals is needed, there is some evidence to suggest that
pets do have the potential to comfort people with mental health
problems, said Dr. Helen Brooks of the Mental Health Research Group
at the University of Manchester in the UK.
“Pets helped their owners manage feelings by distracting them from
symptoms and upsetting experiences such as hearing voices and
suicidal ideation and provided a form of encouragement for
activity,” Brooks said, who wasn’t involved in the current study,
said by email. “Pets provided secure relationships and unconditional
support which were often not available elsewhere.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2qKK5fa Professional Psychology: Research and
Practice, released May 2017.
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