Survey of western Canadian beef producers regarding calf-hood diseases, management practices, and veterinary service usage

Category Primary study
JournalThe Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne
Year 2013
Cow-calf producers in western Canada were surveyed in June 2010 regarding calf-hood diseases and veterinary service usage; 310 producers responded. Use of veterinary services, particularly herd-health related services, increased with herd size as did neonatal diarrhea and clostridial vaccine usage. Administration of clostridial vaccines to pregnant dams before calving was associated with a reduction in neonatal diarrhea treatments; however, there was no association between neonatal diarrhea vaccine usage and a reduction in diarrhea treatments. Producers with > 220 breeding females were more likely than those with < 85 breeding females to seek veterinary advice regarding treating sick calves, have a veterinarian necropsy dead calves, have a veterinarian pregnancy check their bred females, and evaluate their herd bulls for breeding soundness.
Epistemonikos ID: ce205fd48b9f399b32489bc9bf3ba23d92d63c47
First added on: Mar 26, 2020