8 results on '"Steeneveld, Wilma"'
Search Results
2. A stochastic modelling approach to determine the effect of diverse Staphylococcus aureus strains on the economic and epidemiological outcomes of mastitis intervention strategies in dairy cattle
- Author
-
Exel, Catharina E., Halasa, Tariq, Koop, Gerrit, Steeneveld, Wilma, Lam, Theo J.G.M., Benedictus, Lindert, and Gussmann, Maya
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Survival analysis of dairy cows in the Netherlands under altering agricultural policy
- Author
-
Kulkarni, Pranav, Mourits, Monique, Nielen, Mirjam, van den Broek, Jan, and Steeneveld, Wilma
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Economic and epidemiological impact of different intervention strategies for subclinical and clinical mastitis
- Author
-
Gussmann, Maya, Steeneveld, Wilma, Kirkeby, Carsten, Hogeveen, Henk, Farre, Michael, and Halasa, Tariq
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The effect of bovine viral diarrhea virus introduction on milk production of Dutch dairy herds.
- Author
-
Yue, Xiaomei, Steeneveld, Wilma, van der Voort, Mariska, van Schaik, Gerdien, Vernooij, Johannes C.M., van Duijn, Linda, Veldhuis, Anouk M.B., and Hogeveen, Henk
- Subjects
- *
BOVINE viral diarrhea virus , *BOVINE viral diarrhea , *MILK yield , *DAIRY cattle , *DAIRY farms , *DAIRY farmers , *BUSINESS losses - Abstract
Dairy cows are negatively affected by the introduction of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), and consequently, produce less milk. Existing literature on potential milk production losses is based on relatively outdated data and hardly evaluates milk production loss in relation to a new BVDV infection in a surveillance system. This study determined the annual and quarterly loss in milk production of BVDV introduction in 3,126 dairy herds participating in the Dutch BVDV-free program between 2007 and 2017. Among these herds, 640 were "breakdown-herds" that obtained and subsequently lost their BVDV-free status during the study period, and 2,486 herds obtained and retained their BVDV-free status during the study period. Milk yields before and after BVDV introduction were compared through annual and quarterly linear mixed models. The fixed variables for both models included herd type (breakdown-herd or free-herd), bovine viral diarrhea status (on an annual and quarterly basis), year, season, and a random herd effect. The dependent variable was the average daily milk yield on the test day. To define the possible BVDV-introduction dates, 4 scenarios were developed. In the default scenario, the date of breakdown (i.e., loss of the BVDV-free status) was assumed as the BVDV-introduction date. For the other 3 scenarios, the BVDV-introduction dates were set at 4, 6, and 9 mo before the date of breakdown, based on the estimated birth date of a persistently infected calf. In the default scenario, the loss in milk yield due to BVDV introduction occurred mainly in the first year after breakdown, with a reduction in yield of 0.08 kg/cow per day compared with the last year before breakdown. For the other 3 scenarios, the greatest yield reduction occurred in the second year after BVDV introduction, with a loss of 0.09, 0.09, and 0.1 kg/cow per day, respectively. For the first 4 quarters after BVDV introduction in the default scenario, milk yield loss was 0.14, 0.09, 0.02, and 0.08 kg/cow per day, respectively. These quarterly results indicated that milk yield loss was greatest in the first quarter after BVDV introduction. Overall, BVDV introduction had a negative, but on average a relatively small, effect on milk yield for herds participating in the BVDV-free program. This study will enable dairy farmers and policymakers to have a clearer understanding of the quantitative milk production effect of BVDV on dairy farms in a control program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Economic and epidemiological impact of different intervention strategies for clinical contagious mastitis.
- Author
-
Gussmann, Maya, Steeneveld, Wilma, Kirkeby, Carsten, Hogeveen, Henk, Nielen, Mirjam, Farre, Michael, and Halasa, Tariq
- Subjects
- *
BOVINE mastitis , *DAIRY cattle , *STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus , *CULLING of dairy cattle , *ANTIBIOTICS - Abstract
The overall aim of this study was to compare different intervention strategies for clinical intramammary infections (IMI). We conducted a simulation study to represent a Danish dairy cattle herd with IMI caused mostly by Staphylococcus aureus and 9 different intervention strategies for clinical IMI. A standard intervention of 3 d of treatment consisting of intramammary injections for all clinical cases was used. Two of the strategies reflected the use of more antibiotics and 6 strategies reflected cow-specific treatment or culling decisions. For these strategies, we assessed the cost and effectiveness of culling as an IMI intervention. Our results showed that nearly all strategies could reduce the number of IMI cases [e.g., a median of 37 clinical cases with the extended intramammary treatment over 5 d strategy (Basic5) and 30 clinical cases with the cow culled with recovery probability below 50% (Before50)] compared with the standard intervention (median of 42 clinical cases). This happened alongside either increased antibiotic usage (e.g., from a median of 123 treatment days up to 179 treatment days with strategy Basic5) or an increased number of cows culled in relation to IMI (e.g., from a median of 16 up to 24 cows with strategy Before50). Strategies with more antibiotics or reactive culling had a slightly higher net income (e.g., €190,014 median net income with strategy Basic5 or €196,995 with strategy Before50 compared with €187,666 with the standard strategy). This shows that a cow-specific clinical intervention approach can be cost-effective in reducing IMI incidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The effect of new bovine viral diarrhea virus introduction on somatic cell count, calving interval, culling, and calf mortality of dairy herds in the Dutch bovine viral diarrhea virus–free program.
- Author
-
Yue, Xiaomei, van der Voort, Mariska, Steeneveld, Wilma, van Schaik, Gerdien, Vernooij, Johannes C.M., van Duijn, Linda, and Hogeveen, Henk
- Subjects
- *
BOVINE viral diarrhea , *BOVINE viral diarrhea virus , *DAIRY cattle , *SOMATIC cells , *NEGATIVE binomial distribution , *ANIMAL herds , *CALVES - Abstract
Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) infection has a major effect on the health of cows and consequently on herd performance. Many countries have implemented control or eradication programs to mitigate BVDV infection and its negative effects. These negative effects of BVDV infection on dairy herds are well documented, but there is much less information about the effects of new introduction of BVDV on dairy herds already participating in a BVDV control program. The objective of our study was to investigate the effect of a new BVDV introduction in BVDV-free herds participating in the Dutch BVDV-free program on herd performance. Longitudinal herd-level surveillance data were combined with herd information data to create 4 unique data sets, including a monthly test-day somatic cell count (SCC) data set, annual calving interval (CIV) and culling risk (CR) data sets, and a quarterly calf mortality rate (CMR) data set. Each database contained 2 types of herds: herds that remained BVDV free during the whole study period (defined as free herds), and herds that lost their BVDV-free status during the study period (defined as breakdown herds). The date of losing the BVDV-free status was defined as breakdown date. To compare breakdown herds with free herds, a random breakdown date was artificially generated for free herds by simple random sampling from the distribution of the breakdown month of the breakdown herds. The SCC and CIV before and after a new introduction of BVDV were compared through linear mixed-effects models with a Gaussian distribution, and the CR and CMR were modeled using a negative binomial distribution in generalized linear mixed-effects models. The explanatory variables for all models included herd type, BVDV status, year, and a random herd effect. Herd size was included as an explanatory variable in the SCC, CIV, and CMR model. Season was included as an explanatory variable in the SCC and CMR model. Results showed that free herds have lower SCC, CR, CMR, and shorter CIV than the breakdown herds. Within the breakdown herds, the new BVDV introduction affected the SCC and CMR. In the year after BVDV introduction, the SCC was higher than that in the year before BVDV introduction, with a factor of 1.011 [2.5th to 97.5th percentile (95% PCTL): 1.002, 1.020]. Compared with the year before BVDV breakdown, the CMR in the year of breakdown and the year after breakdown was higher, with factors of 1.170 (95% PCTL: 1.120; 1.218) and 1.096 (95% PCTL: 1.048; 1.153), respectively. This study reveals that a new introduction of BVDV had a negative but on average relatively small effect on herd performance in herds participating in a BVDV control program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Economic impacts of constrained replacement heifer supply in dairy herds.
- Author
-
Kulkarni, Pranav S., Haijema, Rene, Hogeveen, Henk, Steeneveld, Wilma, and Mourits, Monique C.M.
- Subjects
- *
HEIFERS , *ANIMAL herds , *DAIRY cattle , *ECONOMIC impact , *DAIRY farm management , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *GROSS margins - Abstract
In recent years, environmental policies, especially in North-western European countries have put pressure on the total livestock on a dairy farm. On closed dairy farms this primarily has resulted in a reduction of the heifer rearing unit to maintain the production unit. The economic consequences of constrained replacement heifer supply on herd level have not been investigated. The objective of this study is to study on herd level the economic impact of suboptimal replacement decisions due to a constrained replacement heifer supply. In this study, we combine a single-cow MDP (Markov Decision Process) optimization model with dairy herd dynamics simulation of 10 years to account for the interdependency among dairy cows within the herd of 100 cows. Besides the base scenario of following optimal replacement policy, we simulated three input scenarios of constrained, excess, and variable replacement heifer supply. In the base scenario, optimal replacement policy resulted in a herd gross margin of €155,108, 11% voluntary replacement rate, 24% involuntary disposal rate annually for a herd of 100 cows. Constrained as well as excess heifer supply resulted in lower gross margins of €85,878 and €138,406 respectively, compared to the base scenario. Constrained heifer supply also resulted in 39% reduction of herd size, involuntary disposal of 17.5% and no voluntary replacements (0.1%) on average per year. Variable heifer supply scenario resulted in lower gross margins (€115,127), lower voluntary replacement rate (4%), highest involuntary disposal rate (28%) but did not result in reduction of herd size, compared to the base scenario. In conclusion, we developed a combination of cow level optimization with a herd level simulation to study the economic impacts of constrained replacement heifer supply. We found that severely constrained, excess, and variable heifer supply result in reduced herd average gross margin. Optimization replacement policy in case of limited heifer availability requires an inter-cow comparison to determine which cows need to be replaced first as this study shows. By demonstrating a simplified approach of combining individual cow optimization with herd dynamics simulation, we accounted for the inter-dependencies within herd. Such an approach can be instrumental in studying environmental impacts, longevity, and welfare of cows when heifer supply is constrained on a herd level. [Display omitted] • Restrictions are placed on dairy heifer replacement supply due to current agricultural policies in NW-Europe. • Study of the economic impact of a constrained heifer supply by combining cow replacement optimization with herd simulation. • Sub-optimal heifer supply scenarios result in lower gross margin in comparison to the optimal replacement scenario. • Severe constraints on heifer supply result in reduced herd size, voluntary disposal, as well as herd gross margin. • Herd mate interdependence determines the economic optimization of replacement decisions under heifer supply constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.