Relationships between the presence of Johne's disease and farm and management factors in dairy cattle in England |
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Authors: | B. etinkaya H. M. Erdogan K. L. Morgan |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Liverpool, Leahurst, Neston, South Wirral, L64 7TE, UK |
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Abstract: | The data collected by a postal questionnaire sent to 3772 randomly selected dairy farmers in England and the border regions in Wales were used to estimate the relationships between the presence of clinical Johne's disease and farm and management factors associated with that disease. Two binary outcomes (case reported in 1993, case reported in 1994) and 27 predictor variables were considered. Only two variables were consistently and significantly associated with clinical disease in multivariable analysis. Farms on which Channel Island breeds were predominant were associated with an increased risk of reporting disease (odds ratios (ORs) ranged from 10.9 to 12.9). The presence of farmed deer on the farm also increased the risk of reporting disease (ORs ranged from 15.2 to 209.3). There were other significant but inconsistent associations involving the source of replacements, age of first-offering hay, type of concentrate feed to calves, and calving in individual pens when the cows were at grass. Since Johne's disease is predominantly subclinical, these contributing factors may play important roles in switching subclinical infection to overt disease. |
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Keywords: | Cattle microbiological diseases Johne's disease Farm and management variables Logistic regression |
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