NATIONAL VETERINARY ACCREDITATION PROGRAM MODULE 28: SIGNIFICANT AND EMERGING VIRAL DISEASES OF CARP, KOI AND GOLDFISH

Kathleen Hartman*, Lynn Creekmore, Lori Gustafson, Christa Speekmann & Katharine Starzel
 
*USDA-APHIS-VS, 1408 24th Street, SE, Ruskin, FL 33570 Kathleen.H.Hartman@aphis.usda.gov

The goal of the NVAP program is to ensure that private veterinary practitioners who provide regulatory services to U.S. livestock, poultry and aquaculture industries, are adequately trained and well acquainted with regulatory requirements through USDA-APHIS accreditation.  In addition to other accreditation requirements, accredited veterinarians are required to successfully complete a required number of 29 training Modules (http://tinyurl.com/NVAP-Modules), four of which currently cover aquatic animal health regulatory issues.

Although initiated as a 1896 agreement between the U.S. and Canada to combat equine disease outbreaks, in 1921 the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) formalized the National Veterinary Accreditation Program (NVAP) so private practitioners could assist Federal veterinarians in controlling animal diseases. In 1992 regulations allow standardized procedures and requirements, and uniform administration to be managed nationally by APHIS, but with authorization of veterinarians licensed to practice on a State-by-State basis.

In 2001/2002 an "Animal Health Safeguarding Review by the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture (NASDA) to further redesign and upgrade the NVAP and suggested that "the accreditation program be the core for emergency preparedness and the response plan." Recommended revisions were published in 2002 ("New Directions for the National Veterinary Accreditation Program," J. Amer. Vet. Med. Assoc., 22(10): 1470-1472), withh revised regulations implemented in 2009.

With accredited veterinarians being the first line of defense against catastrophic disease outbreaks, U.S. has successfully controlled outbreaks of several foreign animal diseases (FADs), including contagious equine metritis, equine piroplasmosis, epizootics of exotic Newcastle disease and West Nile virus, cases of screwworm and monkey pox, and pandemics of the influenza virus - and several aquatic animal diseases.

Module 28 addresses OIE listed and emerging diseases of carp, koi, and goldfish concern to the aquaculture industry, what is required of producers and accredited veterinarians to investigate, diagnose, respond to, and report, how to meet health requirements for movement, and where to find additional information on carp and goldfish diseases.