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Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison

The decline in dairy herd fertility internationally has highlighted the limited impact of traditional veterinary approaches to bovine fertility management. Three questionnaire surveys were conducted at buiatrics conferences attended by veterinary practitioners on veterinary dairy herd fertility serv...

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Autor principal: Mee, JF
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3113840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21851745
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-63-4-230
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author Mee, JF
author_facet Mee, JF
author_sort Mee, JF
collection PubMed
description The decline in dairy herd fertility internationally has highlighted the limited impact of traditional veterinary approaches to bovine fertility management. Three questionnaire surveys were conducted at buiatrics conferences attended by veterinary practitioners on veterinary dairy herd fertility services (HFS) in countries with a seasonal (Ireland, 47 respondents) and non-seasonal breeding model (The Netherlands, 44 respondents and Portugal, 31 respondents). Of the 122 respondents, 73 (60%) provided a HFS and 49 (40%) did not. The majority (76%) of all practitioners who responded stated that bovine fertility had declined in their practice clients' herds with inadequate cow management, inadequate nutrition and increased milk yield as the most important putative causes. The type of clients who adopted a herd fertility service were deemed more educated than average (70% of respondents), and/or had fertility problems (58%) and/or large herds (53%). The main components of this service were routine postpartum examinations (95% of respondents), fertility records analysis (75%) and ultrasound pregnancy examinations (69%). The number of planned visits per annum varied between an average of four in Ireland, where breeding is seasonal, and 23 in Portugal, where breeding is year-round. The benefits to both the practitioner and their clients from running a HFS were cited as better fertility, financial rewards and job satisfaction. For practitioners who did not run a HFS the main reasons given were no client demand (55%) and lack of fertility records (33%). Better economic evidence to convince clients of the cost-benefit of such a service was seen as a major constraint to adoption of this service by 67% of practitioners.
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spelling pubmed-31138402011-06-14 Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison Mee, JF Ir Vet J Research The decline in dairy herd fertility internationally has highlighted the limited impact of traditional veterinary approaches to bovine fertility management. Three questionnaire surveys were conducted at buiatrics conferences attended by veterinary practitioners on veterinary dairy herd fertility services (HFS) in countries with a seasonal (Ireland, 47 respondents) and non-seasonal breeding model (The Netherlands, 44 respondents and Portugal, 31 respondents). Of the 122 respondents, 73 (60%) provided a HFS and 49 (40%) did not. The majority (76%) of all practitioners who responded stated that bovine fertility had declined in their practice clients' herds with inadequate cow management, inadequate nutrition and increased milk yield as the most important putative causes. The type of clients who adopted a herd fertility service were deemed more educated than average (70% of respondents), and/or had fertility problems (58%) and/or large herds (53%). The main components of this service were routine postpartum examinations (95% of respondents), fertility records analysis (75%) and ultrasound pregnancy examinations (69%). The number of planned visits per annum varied between an average of four in Ireland, where breeding is seasonal, and 23 in Portugal, where breeding is year-round. The benefits to both the practitioner and their clients from running a HFS were cited as better fertility, financial rewards and job satisfaction. For practitioners who did not run a HFS the main reasons given were no client demand (55%) and lack of fertility records (33%). Better economic evidence to convince clients of the cost-benefit of such a service was seen as a major constraint to adoption of this service by 67% of practitioners. BioMed Central 2010-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3113840/ /pubmed/21851745 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-63-4-230 Text en
spellingShingle Research
Mee, JF
Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title_full Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title_fullStr Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title_full_unstemmed Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title_short Veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
title_sort veterinary dairy herd fertility service provision in seasonal and non-seasonal dairy industries - a comparison
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3113840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21851745
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-63-4-230
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