Abstract

Observational studies are important in livestock science. As treatment is not assigned randomly in such studies, selection bias can be a problem. This is often addressed by matching methods. However, if treatment and control groups differ considerably in their characteristics, it might be necessary to additionally prune observations that lack overlap in the opposite group. “Matching Frontier” method was developed because pruning observations manually often results in suboptimal solutions. The feasibility of the approach for animal health and welfare issues was tested in an observational study evaluating the effect of free stall housing and increased lying comfort on udder health, veterinary costs, and antibiotic usage in Swiss dairy farming.Data were collected in a survey with 1835 Swiss dairy farmers (response rate 28.3%). The treatment group (n = 179) comprised farmers participating in a voluntary animal welfare program that, in addition to free stall housing, required increased lying comfort. Farmers in the control group (n = 229) kept their cows in tie stalls.Using the Matching Frontier method, treated units were matched to control units based on five confounders. Subsequently, observations were pruned to achieve sufficient balance and overlap between the two groups. The effect of the program on the eight outcome variables was finally estimated using linear regression.Farmers in the treatment group had a lower incidence of clinical mastitis (−3.66 per 100 cow-years, −25%, p < 0.05), a lower incidence of culled cows due to udder health problems (−1.61 per 100 cow-years, −30%, p < 0.05), fewer veterinary costs (−42.44 per cow-year, −22%, p < 0.05), a lower incidence of total intramammary antibiotic treatments (−15.88 per 100 cow-years, −23%, p < 0.01), a lower incidence of intramammary antibiotic treatments for mastitis therapy (−7.83 per 100 cow-years, −32%, p < 0.01), and a lower incidence of intramammary antibiotic treatments for dry-cow therapy (−8.80 per 100 cow-years, −21%, p < 0.05). No differences were found for the average somatic cell count and the number of cows with a cell count above 150.000.The results suggest that free stall housing, in combination with increased lying comfort, can have a positive effect on udder health, animal welfare, and the economic situation of the farm. Additionally, fewer antibiotic treatments can be beneficial to public health.The Matching Frontier method has proven to be a helpful tool that may also have added value for future observational studies in livestock science.

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