THE KENNEL Club is expanding the scope of the
work undertaken by the group responsible for dog
health and welfare, as part of its ongoing commitment
in this area. It is appointing additional experts in
dog health and genetics to ensure that scientific advances
are harnessed for the benefit of pedigree health.
The Dog Health Group, which
will replace the existing Kennel
Club Breed Health and Welfare
Strategy Group (BHWSG), will be
responsible for ensuring that
breeding rules and health testing
requirements evolve to give dogs
the best chance of leading healthy
happy lives. The group will also
play a crucial role in the continued
development of the Kennel Club
Accredited Breeder Scheme, advising
on new health tests that members
of the scheme will be required
to have carried out on their dogs.
The new group will include an
additional two veterinary surgeons,
which will take the number of vets
sitting on the group to four.
A range of external experts,
including human and dog geneticists
and further veterinary surgeons, will
sit on the new subgroups which will
feed their knowledge into and advise
the Dog Health Group. The subgroups
will be:
Breed Standards and
Conformation Sub-Group – to
monitor, advise and work with
breed clubs and councils on health
issues related to dog conformation
and breed standards.
Genetics and Health Screening
Sub-Group – to advise on the
development of health screening
tests and their effectiveness, assess
new tests that may be incorporated
into the Kennel Club Accredited
Breeder Scheme. It will also advise
on breeding and registration issues
that protect or enhance genetic
diversity in individual breeds.
Accredited Breeder Scheme
Sub-Group – to put into operation
health screening requirements and
recommendations that have been
agreed by the Dog Health Group
and breed clubs and councils.
Detrimental
The Dog Health Group and its
subgroups will replace the Breed
Health and Welfare Strategy
Group, which was formed in 2004
with the primary task of reviewing
the breed standards to ensure that
they contained no wording that
encouraged exaggerations that
would be detrimental to pedigree
dog health.
Caroline Kisko, Kennel Club
Secretary, said: “We want 2010 and
beyond to be positive years for
pedigree dogs and, in the absence
of effective government regulation
to control dog breeding, this
restructured group will play a critical
role.
“Scientific advances in the last
ten years have given us an exciting
opportunity to improve pedigree
dog health and has led to a significant
expansion of the health and
welfare work that the Kennel Club
is able to undertake. This new
group will coordinate and advise
on all aspects of this work, using
vital information about dog diseases
and how they are inherited to
direct the Kennel Club’s future
decisions and actions.
“The Kennel Club, in conjunction
with the British Veterinary
Association, has already been able
to develop health screening for eye
diseases, hip and elbow dysplasia
and a number of DNA tests but we
want to be able to develop even
more tests. That is why we will
appoint a wide range of vets,
breeders and human and dog
geneticists, who are experts in their
field, in order to help us achieve
this.”
The creation of the Dog Health
Group, and before this the Breed
Health and Welfare Strategy
Group, is one of many steps taken
by the Kennel Club to ensure the
future health and welfare of pedigree
dogs specifically, and all dogs
in general. Such steps include the
review of all breed standards; the
establishment of the Kennel Club
and Animal Health Trust Canine
Genetics Centre to accelerate
research into inherited diseases; a
ban on parent to child and sibling
dog matings in 2009; co-funding of
the world’s largest survey into
pedigree health in 2004 and assistance
with Imperial College’s
research into genetic diversity of
breeds.