Emotional Support? Law, Social Control, and the Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Legal Landscape
2.1. Peddling Confusion
2.2. Removal of ESA Protections Under the Federal Air Carrier Access Act
2.3. State Laws Banning Fraudulent Service Animals
3. Backlash and Moral Panic
No Dogs Allowed
4. The ESA Concept Is Fundamentally Flawed
4.1. The Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond
A stronger emotional attachment to one’s dog was associated with lower comfort with depending on or trusting in others, whereby lower comfort with depending on or trusting in others was related to higher mental health burden. Moreover, a stronger attachment to one’s dog was also related to a greater fear of being rejected and unloved (Anxiety), which was, in turn, associated with a higher mental health burden.[65]
4.2. Lack of Evidence for the Clinical Concept of Emotional Support
Psychiatrists contemplating writing an ESA letter should be aware of several ethical considerations. It is unethical and illegal to engage in disability fraud by writing ESA letters simply to allow patients to bring pets to non-pet-friendly venues, to avoid fees associated with having a pet, and/or to override restrictions on breeds and species … Even when a patient has a genuine psychiatric disability, given the limited evidence supporting the use of an ESA, it is ethically permissible to decline to write an ESA letter.(p. 8)
Clearly, this is an area in need of rigorous, empirical research. Given the paucity of evidence regarding the efficacy of ESAs in augmenting human physical/mental health, it is problematic that psychologists are writing letters of support for their patient’s need for an ESA.[69] (p. 259)
4.3. Diagnostic Inflation
What is clear from the literature … is that the person that qualifies for an ESA not only has to present with a DSM [Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders] diagnosis, but they have to be significantly impaired by that psychological disorder or problem. Finally, the presence of the ESA has to have a significant impact on their psychological disorder or problem such that without its presence, the individual cannot adequately function … Psychologists who perform these assessments also need to be aware of how little scientific literature exists that supports the assumption that the presence of an animal has any palliative impact on a patient.[69] (p. 258)
4.4. Anthropocentricity: Emotional Support for Whom?
Benevolent speciesism may include ideas about how ‘wonderful’ dogs are—similar to the ‘women are wonderful’ effect in which women are regarded positively but paternalistically … [But] the wonderful qualities that dogs are thought to possess often reflect what dogs do for us and how they make us feel—not who they are. Dogs are often exalted because of how well they seem to exalt humans. Yet dogs have their own experiential worlds and subjective experiences apart from their role as mascots in human lives.[75] (p. 5)
The joy of owning a pet is the unconditional love they give, no matter what. An ESA doesn’t care if you’re feeling out of sorts. They love you anyway! There’s nothing like the unconditional love of an animal, but it’s especially helpful to a person with emotional health issues. It’s not uncommon for a person who has a mental health condition to feel unlovable. At the least, they may not feel like being around people. Your ESA will stay by your side, loving you right through the dark moments.[76]
Fellow passengers [said] that the big brown pig stank up the cabin of the tiny D.C.-bound aircraft and defecated in the aisle … When she tied him to the armrest and tried to clean up after him, he began to howl. ‘She was talking to it like a person, saying it was being a jerk.’[39]
5. From an Anthropocentric Medical Model to a Multispecies Social Model
6. Policy Solutions
6.1. Animal Family Member as a Protected Legal Status
The statutory language quite apparently refers to human children, and it can be assumed that the federal government had only humans in mind when crafting the amendment. However, shifting American family dynamics call for either an amendment to or a judicial reinterpretation of this definition to include pets. Congress should amend the definition to explicitly include pets as part of the familial status for which landlords may not discriminate against renters.[83] (p. 467)
6.2. Exclusionary Policies and Everyday Dilemmas
6.3. Training Requirements and “Canine Good Citizens”
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pallotta, N.R. Emotional Support? Law, Social Control, and the Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond. Pets 2025, 2, 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/pets2040040
Pallotta NR. Emotional Support? Law, Social Control, and the Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond. Pets. 2025; 2(4):40. https://doi.org/10.3390/pets2040040
Chicago/Turabian StylePallotta, Nicole R. 2025. "Emotional Support? Law, Social Control, and the Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond" Pets 2, no. 4: 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/pets2040040
APA StylePallotta, N. R. (2025). Emotional Support? Law, Social Control, and the Medicalization of the Human–Animal Bond. Pets, 2(4), 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/pets2040040
