Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Can pre-collected register data be used to identify dairy herds with good cattle welfare?
- Journal:
- Acta veterinaria Scandinavica
- Year:
- 2011
- Authors:
- Nyman, Ann-Kristin et al.
- Affiliation:
- National Veterinary Institute
Plain-English summary
Researchers looked into whether existing data from dairy farms could help identify herds that are doing well in terms of animal welfare. They studied 55 randomly chosen herds and assessed various welfare indicators, like fertility rates and health issues, to classify which herds had good welfare. They found that 28 of these herds met the criteria for good welfare, but the method they used had some limitations, as it sometimes struggled to accurately identify herds with poorer welfare. Overall, the study suggests that using this kind of data can help recognize farms with good animal welfare, especially when different data sets are combined for better accuracy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pre-recorded register data from dairy herds are available in almost all Nordic countries. These databases can be used for research purposes, and one of the research areas is animal welfare. The aim of this study was to investigate if pre-recorded register data could be used to identify herds with good welfare, and to investigate if a combination of register data sets could be used to be able to more correctly distinguish between herds with good welfare and herds with welfare deficiencies. METHODS: As a first step, nine animal-based measurements on calves, young stock and cows in 55 randomly selected herds were performed on-farm as the basis for a classification of welfare at the herd level. The definition for being a case herd with "good welfare" was no score lying among the 10% worst in any of the nine welfare measurements. Twenty-eight of the 55 herds were cases according to this definition. As a second step, 65 potential welfare indicators, based on register data in a national dairy database, were identified by expert opinion. In the final step, the extent to which the suggested welfare indicators predicted farms' as having good welfare according to the stated definition was assessed. Moreover, the effect of combining in sequence a previously developed model that identified herds with poor welfare with the present model identifying herds with good welfare was investigated. RESULTS: The final set of welfare indicators used to identify herds with good animal welfare included two fertility measures, cow mortality, stillbirth rate, mastitis incidence and incidence of feed-related diseases (including gastrointestinal disturbances but excluding paralyses and cramps). This set had a test sensitivity of correctly classifying herds with no score lying among the 10% worst of the nine welfare measurements of 96 %. However, the specificity of the test was only 56% indicating difficulties for the test to correctly classifying herds with one or more scores lying among the 10% worst. Combining the previously developed model with the present model, improved the welfare classification. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that pre-collected register data may be used to give approval to dairy farms with "good welfare" and that combining different sets of register data can improve the classification of herd welfare.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21999569/