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Livestock Production in the North: The Producer-Veterinarian Relationship

Livestock Production in the North: The Producer-Veterinarian Relationship. A good Producer-Veterinarian r elationship? Its about the efficient production of farm animals. What do we call it? Herd Health Preventive Medicine Program Production Medicine Health Management

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Livestock Production in the North: The Producer-Veterinarian Relationship

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  1. Livestock Production in the North:The Producer-Veterinarian Relationship

  2. A good Producer-Veterinarian relationship?Its about the efficient production of farm animals • What do we call it? • Herd Health • Preventive Medicine Program • Production Medicine • Health Management • Health and Production Management

  3. Objective of Herd Health Management • Maintain animal health and production at the most efficient level that provides maximum economic returns to the animal owner

  4. More Objectives • Comfortable animal housing and good animal welfare. • Prevent disease introduction. • Prevent zoonotic disease. • Avoid contaminants and drug residues. • Minimize pollution by animal waste. • Be a good example to others.

  5. Production Management • Keep it simple: • Regular veterinarian visits (1 or more per year) • Examine animals • Examine performance • Analysis of records • Animal identification • Make recommendations • Involve other animal specialists

  6. Who is this for? • Basic Herd Health principles apply to all farms • How simple or complex the program depends on the farm and the producer’s goals • 5 goats or 5000 milking cows

  7. Requirements of an Effective Program • Progressive Livestock Producer • Successful business people • Information-oriented • Good judgment – innovators • Knowledgeable • Producers who have not over-extended themselves

  8. Requirements of an Effective Program • Progressive Livestock Producer • Program is based on producer’s decision-making framework • What is economically feasible, workable, and acceptable • Simplest record keeping system possible • Understand how best to use a veterinarian

  9. Requirements of an Effective Program • Ask yourself: • Do you care about your animals? • Do you pay attention? • Is there room to improve?

  10. Requirements of an Effective Program • Enthusiastic and competent veterinarian • Knowledge and Skills in: • Veterinary Medicine • Animal Production • Production Economics • Systems Analysis • Information Management

  11. Vaccinations and De-Worming Program? • A vaccination and de-worming program alone does not make a herd health program!!

  12. What to monitor? • Performance measures • What is important to make good decisions? • Examples:

  13. Reproductive Failure Rate % of females exposed to a bull that failed to produce

  14. What to monitor? • More examples: • Weight gain and body condition scores • Quantifiable measure of your product • Pounds of milk produced • Dressed weight of your animals • Most important: • Are you satisfied?

  15. Muskox Calf Growth Rates Just weighing your animals is not enough! 2009

  16. Muskox Calf Growth Rates Just weighing your animals is not enough! 2012 2009

  17. Fundamental Truths • Most health problems are tied to husbandry. • Nutrition! • Facilities • Reproductive management • Management of neonates • Density • Too many species • No biosecurity

  18. Fundamental Truths • Regarding infectious disease, more subclinical (silent) cases occur than clinical cases. • The economic cost of subclinical disease exceeds that of clinical disease. • Subclinical disease is considerably harder to detect and diagnose than is clinical disease.

  19. Fundamental Truths • Infectious disease problems cannot be controlled by focusing solely on clinically affected animals. • New infectious agents often enter a herd and are unnoticed for some time before clinical disease occurs and a diagnosis is finally made.

  20. Fundamental Truths • Most diseases are bought and paid for! • When purchasing animals, the most important information is honest, sound knowledge about the status of the herd of origin. • Quarantine of purchased animals will not protect your herd against carriers of chronic disease.

  21. Dead Animals?Why Not Learn Something!

  22. Diagnostics • Millions of causes and nobody can possibly know each and every one. • Diagnostics is a process • All disease can be grouped in 6 categories: • Infectious • Chemical • Physical • Genetic • Metabolic • Nutritional

  23. Why do animals get sick? Agent Factors Host Factors Environmental Factors

  24. Why do animals get sick? • Is it on the farm? • Dose • Environmental Hardiness • Virulence & Infectivity (microbes) • Toxicity (poisons) Agent Factors Husbandry & Management • Immunity • Age • Gender • Genetics • Behavior • Production status • Reproduction • Density • Housing • Nutrition • Temperature • Wind • Precipitation • Humidity Host Factors Environmental Factors

  25. Alaskan Veterinary Issues • 70% of US Veterinarians are in companion animal practice • Higher in Alaska!

  26. Alaskan Veterinary Issues • Shortage of veterinarians trained or willing to work with farm animals

  27. Alaskan Veterinary Issues • Veterinarians are needed in more than clinical practice – especially in Alaska! • Wildlife Management • Food Safety and Security • Public Health • Environmental Health • Biomedical Research • Fisheries

  28. Department of Veterinary MedicineUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks & Colorado State University • Develop a Veterinary Medical program at UAF. • Get Alaskans involved in Alaska focused veterinary medical education and research. • Enhance the veterinary profession in Alaska. • Engage the veterinary community and the publicwith UAF. • Serve and support food and fiber production. • Promote and foster other specialties at UAF. • Offer continuing education and outreach programs.

  29. One Health • One Health is dedicated to improving the lives of all species—human and animal—through the integration of human medicine, veterinary medicine and environmental science.

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