Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects. / Dachrodt, Linda; Bartel, Alexander; Arndt, Heidi; Kellermann, Laura Maria; Stock, Annegret; Volkmann, Maria; Boeker, Andreas Robert; Birnstiel, Katrin; Duc, Phuong Do; Klawitter, Marcus; Paul, Philip; Stoll, Alexander; Woudstra, Svenja; Knubben-Schweizer, Gabriela; Müller, Kerstin Elisabeth; Hoedemaker, Martina.

In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 23.09.2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Dachrodt, L, Bartel, A, Arndt, H, Kellermann, LM, Stock, A, Volkmann, M, Boeker, AR, Birnstiel, K, Duc, PD, Klawitter, M, Paul, P, Stoll, A, Woudstra, S, Knubben-Schweizer, G, Müller, KE & Hoedemaker, M 2022, 'Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects', Frontiers in Veterinary Science. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

APA

Dachrodt, L., Bartel, A., Arndt, H., Kellermann, L. M., Stock, A., Volkmann, M., Boeker, A. R., Birnstiel, K., Duc, P. D., Klawitter, M., Paul, P., Stoll, A., Woudstra, S., Knubben-Schweizer, G., Müller, K. E., & Hoedemaker, M. (2022). Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

Vancouver

Dachrodt L, Bartel A, Arndt H, Kellermann LM, Stock A, Volkmann M et al. Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2022 Sep 23. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

Author

Dachrodt, Linda ; Bartel, Alexander ; Arndt, Heidi ; Kellermann, Laura Maria ; Stock, Annegret ; Volkmann, Maria ; Boeker, Andreas Robert ; Birnstiel, Katrin ; Duc, Phuong Do ; Klawitter, Marcus ; Paul, Philip ; Stoll, Alexander ; Woudstra, Svenja ; Knubben-Schweizer, Gabriela ; Müller, Kerstin Elisabeth ; Hoedemaker, Martina. / Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects. In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2022.

Bibtex

@article{0e72d6da2c1d43fc979f51ce3bb772d5,
title = "Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects",
abstract = "Good calf health is crucial for a successfully operating farm business and animal welfare on dairy farms. To evaluate calf health on farms and to identify potential problem areas, benchmarking tools can be used by farmers, herd managers, veterinarians, and other advisory persons in the field. However, for calves, benchmarking tools are not yet widely established in practice. This study provides hands-on application for on-farm benchmarking of calf health. Reference values were generated from a large dataset of the “PraeRi” study, including 730 dairy farms with a total of 13,658 examined preweaned dairy calves. At herd level, omphalitis (O, median 15.9%) was the most common disorder, followed by diarrhea (D, 15.4%) and respiratory disease (RD, 2.9%). Abnormal weight bearing (AWB) was rarely detected (median, 0.0%). Calves with symptoms of more than one disorder at the same time (multimorbidity, M) were observed with a prevalence of 2.3%. The enrolled farms varied in herd size, farm operating systems, and management practices and thus represented a wide diversity in dairy farming, enabling a comparison with similar managed farms in Germany and beyond. To ensure comparability of the data in practice, the reference values were calculated for the whole data set, clustered according to farm size (1–40 dairy cows (n = 130), 41–60 dairy cows (n = 99), 61–120 dairy cows (n = 180), 121–240 dairy cows (n = 119) and farms with more than 240 dairy cows (n = 138), farm operating systems (conventional (n = 666), organic (n = 64)) and month of the year of the farm visit. There was a slight tendency for smaller farms to have a lower prevalence of disorders. A statistically significant herd-size effect was detected for RD (p = 0.008) and D (p = 0.001). For practical application of these reference values, tables, diagrams, and an Excel (Microsoft) based calf health calculator were developed as tools for on-farm benchmarking (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6172753). In addition, this study provides a detailed description of the colostrum, feeding and housing management of preweaned calves in German dairy farms of different herd sizes and farm type (e.g., conventional and organic).",
author = "Linda Dachrodt and Alexander Bartel and Heidi Arndt and Kellermann, {Laura Maria} and Annegret Stock and Maria Volkmann and Boeker, {Andreas Robert} and Katrin Birnstiel and Duc, {Phuong Do} and Marcus Klawitter and Philip Paul and Alexander Stoll and Svenja Woudstra and Gabriela Knubben-Schweizer and M{\"u}ller, {Kerstin Elisabeth} and Martina Hoedemaker",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
day = "23",
doi = "10.3389/fvets.2022.990798",
language = "English",
journal = "Frontiers in Veterinary Science",
issn = "2297-1769",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Benchmarking calf health: Assessment tools for dairy herd health consultancy based on reference values from 730 German dairies with respect to seasonal, farm type, and herd size effects

AU - Dachrodt, Linda

AU - Bartel, Alexander

AU - Arndt, Heidi

AU - Kellermann, Laura Maria

AU - Stock, Annegret

AU - Volkmann, Maria

AU - Boeker, Andreas Robert

AU - Birnstiel, Katrin

AU - Duc, Phuong Do

AU - Klawitter, Marcus

AU - Paul, Philip

AU - Stoll, Alexander

AU - Woudstra, Svenja

AU - Knubben-Schweizer, Gabriela

AU - Müller, Kerstin Elisabeth

AU - Hoedemaker, Martina

PY - 2022/9/23

Y1 - 2022/9/23

N2 - Good calf health is crucial for a successfully operating farm business and animal welfare on dairy farms. To evaluate calf health on farms and to identify potential problem areas, benchmarking tools can be used by farmers, herd managers, veterinarians, and other advisory persons in the field. However, for calves, benchmarking tools are not yet widely established in practice. This study provides hands-on application for on-farm benchmarking of calf health. Reference values were generated from a large dataset of the “PraeRi” study, including 730 dairy farms with a total of 13,658 examined preweaned dairy calves. At herd level, omphalitis (O, median 15.9%) was the most common disorder, followed by diarrhea (D, 15.4%) and respiratory disease (RD, 2.9%). Abnormal weight bearing (AWB) was rarely detected (median, 0.0%). Calves with symptoms of more than one disorder at the same time (multimorbidity, M) were observed with a prevalence of 2.3%. The enrolled farms varied in herd size, farm operating systems, and management practices and thus represented a wide diversity in dairy farming, enabling a comparison with similar managed farms in Germany and beyond. To ensure comparability of the data in practice, the reference values were calculated for the whole data set, clustered according to farm size (1–40 dairy cows (n = 130), 41–60 dairy cows (n = 99), 61–120 dairy cows (n = 180), 121–240 dairy cows (n = 119) and farms with more than 240 dairy cows (n = 138), farm operating systems (conventional (n = 666), organic (n = 64)) and month of the year of the farm visit. There was a slight tendency for smaller farms to have a lower prevalence of disorders. A statistically significant herd-size effect was detected for RD (p = 0.008) and D (p = 0.001). For practical application of these reference values, tables, diagrams, and an Excel (Microsoft) based calf health calculator were developed as tools for on-farm benchmarking (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6172753). In addition, this study provides a detailed description of the colostrum, feeding and housing management of preweaned calves in German dairy farms of different herd sizes and farm type (e.g., conventional and organic).

AB - Good calf health is crucial for a successfully operating farm business and animal welfare on dairy farms. To evaluate calf health on farms and to identify potential problem areas, benchmarking tools can be used by farmers, herd managers, veterinarians, and other advisory persons in the field. However, for calves, benchmarking tools are not yet widely established in practice. This study provides hands-on application for on-farm benchmarking of calf health. Reference values were generated from a large dataset of the “PraeRi” study, including 730 dairy farms with a total of 13,658 examined preweaned dairy calves. At herd level, omphalitis (O, median 15.9%) was the most common disorder, followed by diarrhea (D, 15.4%) and respiratory disease (RD, 2.9%). Abnormal weight bearing (AWB) was rarely detected (median, 0.0%). Calves with symptoms of more than one disorder at the same time (multimorbidity, M) were observed with a prevalence of 2.3%. The enrolled farms varied in herd size, farm operating systems, and management practices and thus represented a wide diversity in dairy farming, enabling a comparison with similar managed farms in Germany and beyond. To ensure comparability of the data in practice, the reference values were calculated for the whole data set, clustered according to farm size (1–40 dairy cows (n = 130), 41–60 dairy cows (n = 99), 61–120 dairy cows (n = 180), 121–240 dairy cows (n = 119) and farms with more than 240 dairy cows (n = 138), farm operating systems (conventional (n = 666), organic (n = 64)) and month of the year of the farm visit. There was a slight tendency for smaller farms to have a lower prevalence of disorders. A statistically significant herd-size effect was detected for RD (p = 0.008) and D (p = 0.001). For practical application of these reference values, tables, diagrams, and an Excel (Microsoft) based calf health calculator were developed as tools for on-farm benchmarking (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6172753). In addition, this study provides a detailed description of the colostrum, feeding and housing management of preweaned calves in German dairy farms of different herd sizes and farm type (e.g., conventional and organic).

UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

U2 - 10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

DO - 10.3389/fvets.2022.990798

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36213417

JO - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

JF - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

SN - 2297-1769

ER -

ID: 326467884