Abstract
A Dutch dairy company initiated a quality system to
support dairy farmers to improve sustainability on their
farm. Improvement of udder health is defined by the
dairy company as one of the sustainability items. A part
of that quality system is to offer farmers 3 tools to improve
the udder health status of the herd. The first tool
is an Udder Health Workshop at which farmers make a
farm-specific action plan to improve the udder health
situation in their herd. The second tool is the Udder
Health Navigator, which is an internet-based program
to gain insight in the actual udder health situation at
the farm. The third tool is the Udder Health Checklist,
which is available on the internet and it identifies farmspecific
risks for udder health problems. The aim of
this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of these
tools in improving udder health. The bulk milk somatic
cell count (BMSCC) was used as the measure of herd
udder health performance. In total, 605 farms attended
the Udder Health Workshop, 988 farms completed the
Udder Health Navigator, and 1,855 farms completed
the Udder Health Checklist in 2012. Information on
BMSCC records (2 records per month) was available
for 12,782 Dutch dairy farms during the years 2011 and
2012. For every farm, the average BMSCC of all months
during the years 2012 and 2011 were calculated. This
resulted in 306,768 average monthly observations of the
BMSCC. Subsequently, all months after the completion
of one of the tools were assigned a 1, and all other
months were assigned a 0. A statistical analysis was
carried out to compare the average monthly BMSCC of
the farms that completed one or more tools with farms
that did not complete one of the tools. Both completing
the Udder Health Navigator and the Udder Health
Checklist had a significant association with a lower average
monthly BMSCC. The effect of the Udder Health
Navigator and Udder Health Checklist on the BMSCC
were greater in herds with a BMSCC in 2011 of 200,000
to 250,000 cells/mL and even greater for herds with a
BMSCC above 250,000 cells/mL compared with herds
with a BMSCC in 2011 of 150,000 to 200,000 cells/mL
or less than 150,000 cells/mL. It is difficult to draw
conclusions on the effect of the Udder Health Workshop
due to overlap in participation between the tools. The
results suggest that completing the web tools is associated
with a reduction in the BMSCC of the herd.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1529-1534 |
Journal | Journal of Dairy Science |
Volume | 97 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
Keywords
- somatic-cell count
- mastitis control program
- bulk tank milk
- management-practices
- risk-factors
- quality
- netherlands
- costs