Abstract

Neonatal lamb and calf deaths are a major issue in UK agriculture. Consistent mortality rates over several decades, despite scientific advances, indicate that socioeconomic factors must also be understood and addressed for effective veterinary service delivery to improve lamb and calf survival. This qualitative study utilised semi-structured interviews with vets and farmers to explore the on-farm mechanisms and social context, with a particular focus on the role of the vet, to manage and reduce neonatal losses in beef calves and lambs on British farms. Data were analysed using a realist evaluation framework to assess how the mechanisms and context for veterinary service delivery influence survival as the outcome of interest. A lack of a clear outcome definition of neonatal mortality, and the financial, social and emotional impact of losses on both vets and farmers, are barriers to recording of losses and standardisation of acceptable mortality levels at a population level. Despite this, there appears to be an individual threshold on each farm at which losses become perceived as problematic, and veterinary involvement shifts from preventive to reactive mechanisms for service delivery. The veterinarian-farmer relationship is central to efforts to maximise survival, but the social and economic capital available to farmers influences the quality of this relationship. Health inequalities are well-recognised as an issue in human healthcare and the findings indicate that similar inequalities exist in livestock health systems.

Highlights

  • Neonatal deaths of lambs and beef calves are considered to be a major problem in UK agriculture

  • Separate interview schedules were used for the veterinarian and farmer interviews, but covered the same main topics, relating to participants’ experiences of neonatal losses on their/their clients’ farmers and informed by the realist evaluation framework

  • An explanation of a social process from scientific realist evaluation is sometimes presented as a simple formula: Outcome = Mechanism + Context [27]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Neonatal deaths of lambs and beef calves are considered to be a major problem in UK agriculture. The literature around neonatal losses has focussed mainly on the technical aspects of improving survival. The basic science of losses is well-understood, with management practices on the farm having the greatest impact on survival. A comprehensive review of neonatal survival in small ruminants [1] found that the despite improvements in the scientific evidence base, survival has not increased notably in the last three decades, with mean mortality of around 15%, this varies widely. The evidence base around mortality levels in a UK-specific context, as well as targeted interventions and management practices that could increase survival, is limited. The most recent study of on-farm risk factors for lamb mortality in the UK was conducted over 20 years ago [2] and no similar risk factor studies have been published for suckler calf mortality

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call