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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 65 No. 4 644-652
© 1982 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Projecting Health Cost from Research Herds1

R. D. Shanks

Department of Dairy Science, University of Illinois, Urbana 61801

P. J. Berger, A. E. Freeman and D. H. Kelley

Department of Animal Science, Iowa State University, Ames 50011

F. N. Dickinson

USDA, SEA, AR, ASI, AIPL, Beltsville, MD 20705

ABSTRACT

Health costs by categories were summarized from 1,999 lactations of 863 cows in three dairy herds. These costs were projected to Dairy Herd Improvement data. Health categories were mammary, reproduction, locomotion, digestion, respiration, other, and total. The largest estimated total health cost of $67.63 was associated with postpartum length (days in milk and dry) greater than 420 days, an average 98 days dry, and milk production greater than 8,250 kg in fourth or later terminal lactations. The smallest estimated total health cost of $22.25 per lactation was associated with production between 5,750 and 6,999 kg in the nonterminal first lactation with postpartum length less than 300 days. For nonterminal first lactations of intermediate length, the estimated total health cost represented 3 to 6% of the value of milk production. First-calf heifers with milk production less than 5,750 kg and postpartum length 300 to 419 days had the least mammary cost. Cows in their fourth or later lactations with postpartum length greater than 420 days and milk production less than 5,750 kg had the highest reproductive cost.


FOOTNOTES

1 Journal Paper No. J—10005 of the Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station, Ames. Project No. 1053, a contributing project to North Central Regional Project, NC—2, Improvement of Dairy Cattle Through Breeding.







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