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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

A health program for commercial dairy herds. 1. Objectives and methods.

Journal:
Australian veterinary journal
Year:
1978
Authors:
Blood, D C et al.

Plain-English summary

This study looks at a health program designed for dairy farms to help keep cows healthy and productive. Over eight years, researchers found that the usual veterinary services weren't enough to meet their goals, so they created a new method that focuses on performance targets. They use a computer system to closely monitor each herd's health and productivity, which helps identify any issues when the cows aren't performing as expected. The program includes specific health checks for the cows to either fix problems or confirm that everything is going well. The study suggests that this new approach could be more effective in maintaining the health of dairy herds.

Abstract

A health program for dairy herds is defined as a planned and coordinated approach to achieving and maintaining optimal health and productive efficiency of livestock. A program is described, which has been developed over a period of eight years to fulfill this definition in providing veterinary services to commercial dairy herds. It is demonstrated that clinical veterinary services to participating herds did not satisfactorily achieve the stated aim and therefore an alternative approach was developed. This approach is centred around the concept of performance targets, and each herd is monitored closely by means of a computer-based health and productivity monitoring system in order to detect deviation from target performance. When such deviations occur, the monitoring system is used to diagnose the nature of the problem. The detailed targets adopted in this study are described and the examinations which are undertaken on cattle are outlined. These examinations are aimed at correcting problems, or at confirming satisfactory performance. Further details of the findings of the study are outlined in following papers.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/687284/