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Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2003

Morbidity in Swedish dairy calves from birth to 90 days of age and individual calf-level risk factors for infectious diseases

Svensson C, Lundborg K, Emanuelson U, Olsson SO

Abstract

The health of 3081 heifer calves born in 122 dairy herds in the south-west of Sweden from 1 January to 31 December, 1998, was monitored from birth until 90 days of age. The calves were kept either in individual pens (n = 2167), in group pens, with 3-8 calves to a pen and manual feeding of milk (n = 440), in group pens with 6-30 calves per pen and an automatic milk-feeding system (n = 431), or with their dams (n = 43). Disease incidence was recorded by farmers and project veterinarians, who clinically examined the calves and auscultated their lungs every 2-3 months. A disease was graded as 'severe' if the general loss of condition or of appetite in the calf continued for >2 days or if the animal suffered severe weight loss due to the disease. The effects of season, breed, housing, and type of colostrum feeding, and time, place and supervision of calving on the incidences of diarrhea, severe diarrhea, respiratory disease, other infectious disease and moderately to severely increased respiratory sounds, were analyzed by logistic-regression models (with herd as a random effect). The total morbidity rate was 0.081 cases per calf-month at risk. Incidence rates of arthritis, diarrhea, omphalophlebitis, respiratory disease and ringworm were 0.002, 0.035, 0.005, 0.025 and 0.009 cases per calf-months at risk, respectively. The odds ratios for diarrhea and severe diarrhea were increased in Swedish Red and Whites (OR: 1.6, 2.3) and in calves that received colostrum from first-lactation cows (OR: 1.3-1.8), and for severe diarrhea in calves born in summer or that received colostrum through suckling (OR: 1.7, 1.8). The odds ratios for respiratory disease and increased respiratory sounds were increased in calves housed in large-group pens with an automatic milk-feeding system (OR: 2.2, 2.8). Supervision of calving was associated with a decreased odds ratio for respiratory disease (OR: 0.7) and birth in individual maternity pen or tie stalls with a decreased odds ratio for increased respiratory sounds (OR: 0.5-0.6). Cross-breeds with beef breeds were associated with increased odds ratios for increased respiratory sounds (OR: 2.1-4.3) and colostrum from second-lactation cows and irt during night or other infectious disease (OR: 1.6, 1.5). (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

Keywords

Arthritis; Diarrhea; Respiratory disease; Omphalophelbitis; Ringworm; Morbidity; Treatment; Housing; Season; Calves; Colostrum; Calving management

Published in

Preventive Veterinary Medicine
2003, Volume: 58, number: 3-4, pages: 179-197
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV