
As far as I am concerned all breeds should be hip scored as HD occurs in all breeds, you only have to look at the OFA statistics to see that the worst breed for hips is the Bulldog, yet very seldom scored in the UK.
The basic eye test too, as many breeds have some eye anomaly or another,a nd I know of one breed where one was discovered on random testing when the bred didn't test.
As for other health tests then I think there needs to be evidence of a breed issue, such as hearts etc, as if every breed did every imaginable test, where would ti end, costing breeders thousands and pretty soon no one except very well heeled folk could afford to breed at all.
For example we don't elbow test our breed, there have been those who have done them in the USA and 100% normal, 1 was done in UK by owners new to the breed also 100% normal, so would not appear to be something we need to do unless we start getting clinical cases.
This is where the BVA could be so much more help if they had Vets accurately report incidences of inherited problems so breeds could be alerted when these became statistically significant.
Of course then they would have to properly identify their patients breed, and only cal them the breed if they were KC registered as whatever breed.
I do think that the cost of for example hip scoring is prohibitively expensive. I am yet to be able to persuade any no breeding owner to have them done when they get quoted well over £200 to get it done and have to have their poor baby given a GA.
I think we are lucky in our breed that at least 20% of the total number KC registered puppies go on to be hip scored and eye tested so the results are a reliable indication of the breeds health as a whole, this is not the case in numerically strong breeds where the number tested is a tiny percentage of the overall population. Within a numerically small breed with most breeders breeding to a code of ethics it is much easier to spot an emerging problem, and formualte policy accordingly. This is why our breed decided to ask breeders to test Kideney function as soem cases of Familial renal problms ahve cropped up world wide, but thigns are very unclear based on extensive reserach in Scandinavia etc, so we are monitoring the situation.