1. Economic cost of difficult calvings in the United Kingdom dairy herd
- Author
-
B. J. McGuirk, H. Dobson, and R. Forsyth
- Subjects
Male ,Veterinary Medicine ,Total cost ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Cattle Diseases ,Ice calving ,Culling ,Agricultural science ,Animal science ,Pregnancy ,Economic cost ,Animals ,Insemination, Artificial ,health care economics and organizations ,General Veterinary ,Cost–benefit analysis ,Dairy herds ,Reproduction ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Delivery, Obstetric ,Dystocia ,United Kingdom ,Dairying ,Herd ,Cattle ,Female ,Calf mortality ,Business - Abstract
Information on the losses associated with lower milk production and reproductive performance, as well as information from a survey of uk dairy herds using beef semen was used to estimate the economic importance of calving difficulties in uk dairy herds. The survey covered information on cow and calf mortality, cow culling and the need for veterinary assistance, the incidences of which were related to the degree of calving difficulty experienced. The total cost of a slightly difficult calving was estimated to be approximately 110 pounds, and of a seriously difficult calving between 350 pounds and 400 pounds, depending on assumptions of the veterinary costs. However, the major costs were associated with the labour required at the delivery, the increase in the number of days open, and the costs associated with the deaths of cows and calves, and cow culling.
- Published
- 2007
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