I’ve been sick the last few days. Some sort of stomach virus, I think. That’s why I haven’t posted in a few
days. Thankfully, I am feeling better
now. But it got me thinking about
dealing with health care issues with a service dog.
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, people that rely
on service dogs are allowed to take their dogs to most health care facilities,
including doctors’ offices and hospitals, as long as the presence of the dog
doesn’t cause a “fundamental alteration in the provision of goods or services.” What that means in practice, and in plain
English, is that you cannot take a service dog into an area where the presence
of the dog would compromise the quality of care given to you or to other
patients.
One easy way to think about it with regards to a hospital is
to consider in which areas of the hospital people have to wear special
clothing. In an operating room or a burn
care unit, for instance, staff members all have to wear gowns and gloves and
masks and shoe covers and hair covers.
However, you cannot dress up a dog like that. The presence of a service dog could cause
serious problems and there is really no way around it, no “reasonable
accommodation” that could be made in order to allow the dog’s presence.
Plus, if you are having surgery, you are not going to be
able to manage your dog and your dog is not likely to be able to do any tasks
that help you with anything. Most
likely, you’ll be unconscious but even if you are having surgery under local or
regional anesthesia and are awake, you’re not going to need your dog to pick up
things for you or open doors for you or alert you to sounds or whatever it is
your dog usually does for you.
You should, however, be able to take your service dog to the
emergency room, to the lab, to the cafeteria, to the gift shop, and to visit
patients on most units of the hospital.
If you are going to the emergency room because you are sick, though, you
might want to bring along a friend that can help with your dog. If you end up being there a long time, your
dog may need to go outside and you might not be able to take it for a walk
right then. If you have to get x-rays or
certain other tests, it may not be safe for your dog to be in the room with
you, and hospital staff is not responsible for caring for your dog.
If you need to be admitted to the hospital for some reason,
in most cases you should be able to take your service dog with you if you want
to, but you should think about it carefully.
If you are sick enough to require hospitalization, you are probably too
sick to take your dog for walks and to take care of your dog in other
ways. You could arrange for a friend or
family member to come in several times a day to take your dog for walks, or you
could hire a dog walker to do that.
Still, your dog is probably going to get bored and unhappy doing nothing
but sitting beside your hospital bed for several days. Most people that rely on service dogs choose
to leave their dog with a friend or family member or send their dogs to a
boarder when they need to be hospitalized.
Some people with service dogs have also told me that their
dogs seemed pretty freaked out to see them in the hospital right after
surgery. Even dogs that had been around
hospital patients before, like visiting someone in the hospital, were upset to
see their owners in a lot of pain and smelling like… well, whatever people
smell like right after major surgery.
Blood and guts, maybe?
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