Yes, I agree this is bad.  I hate it when rescues do this.  Even Nathan
Winograd, who is against testing, states that the one thing you should not
do is selective testing.  Either test none or all.

I think people do this because they really do not understand the disease, or
have outdated information.  I tried to educate my previous rescue group
regarding FELV and it fell on deaf ears.


On 11/25/06, Dianne K Perry, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 Here I have learned that the policy with rescue cat groups is that they
test 1 in the litter of feral cats.....my Asia did not get tested but her
brother did.....he tested negative but her paperwork states she was tested a
year ago....and was negative.  When I called that vet yesterday I was told
no we do not have a record of her being tested, we only test one in a litter
and it was her brother that got tested, Pierre.

I think the all should be tested.

Dianne

----- Original Message -----
*From:* catatonya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
*Sent:* Saturday, November 25, 2006 7:06 PM
*Subject:* Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues


I would not test.  I just haven't been on list lately.  I wish testing had
never started.  Vaccinate and adopt is what I would do.  FIV and Felv should
be treated as any other illness a cat might come down with.
t

*Kelley Saveika <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>* wrote:

Wow, this is a lot of information to process. Thanks everyone!

I know there are a lot of people who advocate NOT testing and was
surprised to find no one spoke up on that angle.   One of my favorite animal
people, Nathan Winograd, does not test for FIV and only tests for FELV
because the board insists.

I know most of the well known feral cat groups do not test cats who appear
healthy, but that's a different can of worms.

I will say that all cats that come into rescue are initially tested,
because that is what the shelters around here do.  I have set up that I will
require owner surrenders provide proof of negative combo test.

I'm not sure about the statements about eventually having lots of FELV+
cats to deal with.  In this area I know people who have been doing rescue
for years and not come across a single case or maybe one or 2.

What I don't want is for a foster to end up in the position I did, when I
had a kitten test light + and no one, from the director on down, could tell
me what to do, what was going to happen to the cats, etc.

Fortunately she and the rest of that litter later tested negative.


On 11/12/06, Kelley Saveika <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi guys,
>
> If you were establishing a rescue, what kind of felv/fiv testing policy
> would you use?  If the cats were positive for either or both, what would you
> do?
>
> Thanks for your input.
>
> Kelley
>
> --
> Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!
>
> http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20
>



--
Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20





--
Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20

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