Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Farm economic impacts of bovine Johne's disease in endemically infected Australian dairy herds.
- Journal:
- Australian veterinary journal
- Year:
- 2016
- Authors:
- Shephard, R W et al.
- Affiliation:
- Herd Health Pty Ltd · Australia
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the farm economic impact of bovine Johne's disease (BJD) infection and controls in commercial Victorian dairy herds. DESIGN: Benefit-cost analysis of BJD and various control methods in a Victorian dairy herd. RESULTS: Farm losses from BJD occurred from clinical disease. Clinical cases occur on average in 5-year-old cows, resulting in losses of A$1895 in the year of culling and A$221 in the year preceding culling, giving a total loss of A$2116. Early removal also resulted in loss of future profit equating to A$375 per year. This is the annualised value of foregone future income and costs expressed as a net present value (NPV). The total loss from removal of a clinical case was estimated as A$2491. The average clinical incidence in infected dairy herds prior to entry into the Victorian Bovine Johne's Test-and-Control Program (TCP) was 1.8% and the average Victorian dairy herd size was 262 cows in 2013-14, resulting in annual losses of 4.7 clinical cases if infected and implementing no BJD control. Farm annual loss of profit was estimated as A$11,748 ($44.84 per cow/year). Control of BJD using vaccination, test-and-cull or combined approaches was economical but the cost of implementation in initial years would exceed disease costs. Vaccination-based control provided minimal long-term losses and was the most cost-effective control over a 10-year planning horizon. CONCLUSION: Endemic BJD resulted in modest but persistent losses in typical infected dairy herds. Control of disease using test-and-cull, vaccination or combined test-and-cull with vaccination was cost-effective.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27349883/