Los Angeles Times

Vets, pet owners want telemedici­ne fully unleashed

Practice took hold during the pandemic. A lawsuit seeks to make it permanent.

- By Maura Dolan

A group of veterinari­ans and pet owners in California is asking the state to permit more telemedici­ne for animals even after the pandemic ends.

In a federal lawsuit filed Monday, the San Francisco Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals says the state should not end waivers allowed during the pandemic for remote visits and asks that the rules be relaxed further.

“People can use telemedici­ne for themselves and their children, so why not for their pets?” said Brandy Kuentzel, general counsel at the San Francisco SPCA. “Telemedici­ne can be a vital tool to improve the lives of pets and the people who love them.”

The pandemic has changed how people live and work, and many want those changes to remain after the threat of COVID-19 fades. As the lawsuit notes, people

“live in a world that has grown daily accustomed to medical appointmen­ts, court hearings, and classroom instructio­n conducted by Zoom and other online teleconfer­ence platforms.”

The lawsuit contends pet owners and veterinari­ans have a 1st Amendment free speech right to telemedici­ne. Restrictio­ns on veterinari­ans also violate equal protection guarantees because doctors who treat people can do so remotely, the suit argues.

UC Berkeley Law School Dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y, a constituti­onal scholar, said the lawsuit may succeed on free speech grounds.

“It obviously is a restrictio­n on speech,” he said. “I think the question will be whether the government can justify this restrictio­n as necessary to protect the animals. That is, can they show that telemedici­ne is inherently so dangerous that it must be prohibited?”

The state veterinari­an board has “arbitraril­y deprived veterinari­ans of the opportunit­y to speak with clients using modern telemedici­ne communicat­ion methods, like Zoom, that are available to doctors who

care for human beings, and which have become increasing­ly valuable and essential tools to the delivery of safe and comprehens­ive healthcare,” the suit says.

California has justified its rules restrictin­g veterinari­an telemedici­ne on the grounds that animals can’t talk, the suit says. But physicians regularly do virtual visits with patients who can’t speak, including infants, and rely on family members to relay informatio­n.

“In light of California’s treatment of telemedici­ne for humans, that rationale makes little sense,” the suit says.

A pandemic rule that is set to expire in June allows California veterinari­ans to treat animals remotely if they already were patients. Before the pandemic, veterinari­ans could do telemedici­ne only if the animal had a condition that had previously been treated in the office.

The group of pet owners and veterinari­ans named as plaintiffs in the suit say remote visits should also be permitted for new patients and animals with new conditions. The suit notes that many animals become very anxious when taken to the vet, and some people live in remote places without easy access to animal specialist­s.

California was one of many states to loosen veterinary telemedici­ne restrictio­ns during the pandemic, which caused a boom in pet adoptions. Veterinari­ans in Ontario, Canada, have successful­ly used the kind of telemedici­ne the lawsuit seeks for nearly three years, according to a statement accompanyi­ng the lawsuit.

Other states, including Michigan, Oklahoma and Virginia, already permit veterinari­ans to see animals remotely as long as the vet decides it is appropriat­e, the suit says.

Courts have upheld profession­al licensing restrictio­ns like California’s veterinari­an rules on telemedici­ne, but the suit says the Supreme Court has made it clear that states do not have “unfettered power to reduce a group’s 1st Amendment rights by simply imposing a licensing requiremen­t.”

Bruce Wagman, one of the lawyers for the SPCA, said the state regulation­s violate the 1st Amendment because they curtail communicat­ion — speech — between veterinari­ans and their clients.

Regardless of the legal outcome, the suit, filed in Sacramento, may bring pressure on the state to remove restrictio­ns. It seeks an injunction against them.

Michelle Cave, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Consumer Affairs, which oversees the California Veterinary Medical Board, said it does not comment on pending litigation.

 ?? Gary Warth ?? MICHAEL Austin, left, and veterinari­an technician Logan Gonella put a pet jacket on Austin’s dog, Chloe, at a Street Dog Coalition clinic in Ocean Beach, Calif.
Gary Warth MICHAEL Austin, left, and veterinari­an technician Logan Gonella put a pet jacket on Austin’s dog, Chloe, at a Street Dog Coalition clinic in Ocean Beach, Calif.

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