I took some swabs for KHV the other day on behalf of one of my clients and just received the following mail from MDS:
Dear Mr Viljoen,
Thank you for using our service. We acknowledge your request for a KHV free certificate unfortunately we have changed our policy with regards the issuing of KHV free certificates. This followed discussions and input from Veterinarians involved in the control of aquatic diseases. We will now only issue a certificate if the sample is collected by a veterinarian. We will certify the results but the certificate will be signed by the veterinarian who collected the sample.
I do apologise for any inconvenience that this has caused.
Kind regards
Dr York
This new policy is going to affect the costs of KHV tests dramatically. Previously, when hobbyists were in doubt, they were quite prepared to send swabs to make sure because at R 560 for three tests, it was not a high price to pay for that peace of mind.
Now, they will think twice. In the Western Cape, there are only one, maybe two vets that are willing to be called out for fish, and at a huge price tag.
The average vet do not know anything about Koi and is not interested.
Imagine you are situated in a remote area. You will have to search for and call out a vet from very far away to attend to the swab, being a very simple procedure.
This new ruling is going to affect the spread of KHV in South Africa negatively. Hobbyists will not pay more than a thousand rand to test their collection and dealers are going to do much less tests, at the possible cost of hobbyists.
What is your view?