Abstract

BackgroundSeveral management and environmental factors are known as contributory causes of clinical mastitis in dairy herd. The study objectives were to describe the structure of herd-specific mastitis management and environmental factors and to assess the relevance of these herd-specific indicators to mastitis incidence rate.MethodsDisease reports from the Danish Cattle Data Base and a management questionnaire from 2,146 herds in three Danish regions were analyzed to identify and characterize risk factors of clinical mastitis. A total of 94 (18 continuous and 76 discrete) management and production variables were screened in separate bivariate regression models. Variables associated with mastitis incidence rate at a p-value < 0.10 were examined with a factor analysis to assess the construct of data. Separately, a multivariable regression model was used to estimate the association of management variables with herd mastitis rate.ResultsThree latent factors (quality of labor, region of Denmark and claw trimming, and quality of outdoor holding area) were identified from 14 variables. Daily milk production per cow, claw disease, quality of labor and region of Denmark were found to be significantly associated with mastitis incidence rate. A common multiple regression analysis with backward and forward selection procedures indicated there were 9 herd-specific risk factors.ConclusionThough risk factors ascertained by farmer-completed surveys explained a small percentage of the among-herd variability in crude herd-specific mastitis rates, the study suggested that farmer attitudes toward mastitis and lameness treatment were important determinants for mastitis incidence rate. Our factor analysis identified one significant latent factor, which was related to labor quality on the farm.

Highlights

  • Several management and environmental factors are known as contributory causes of clinical mastitis in dairy herd

  • Designed and controlled field trials will eventually be required to further evaluate the causal importance of specific risk factors for specific Clinical mastitis (CM) etiologic groupings. This current study focused on herd-specific management and environmental factors related to CM incidence in the Danish dairy industry

  • Though risk factors ascertained by farmer-completed surveys explained a small percentage of the among-herd variability in crude herd-specific mastitis rates, the study suggested that farmer attitudes toward mastitis and lameness treatment were important determinants for mastitis incidence rate

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Summary

Introduction

Several management and environmental factors are known as contributory causes of clinical mastitis in dairy herd. Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica 2008, 50:4 http://www.actavetscand.com/content/50/1/4 management and environmental factors are important contributory causes of CM. Factors such as housing [2], nutrition [3,4], milk production, milking procedures [5], and dry cow treatment [6] have been found to be associated with CM incidence. Collecting reliable information on management factors and herd-specific rates of CM can be difficult and expensive, and has limited the size of many previous studies. Another difficulty is that many management variables are strongly interrelated, creating potential collinearity problems for statistical analysis

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