Veterinary treatment strategies for clinical mastitis in dairy cows in Sweden

To evaluate if Swedish veterinary guidelines on use of antimicrobials in cases of clinical mastitis in dairy cows have been adopted by veterinary practitioners, their treatment strategies were evaluated in a cross-sectional study using a web-based questionnaire. Another aim was to study if the strategies differed among veterinarians due to year and country of exam, sex, region, numbers of mastitis cases per month, and postgraduate training in herd health using multivariable logistic regression models. In total, 267 of 741 (36 per cent) veterinarians contacted answered the questionnaire satisfactorily. Most considered bacteriological diagnostics important, but many veterinarians made treatment decisions without collecting information on antimicrobial susceptibility. Moreover, few veterinarians used measuring tape to assess bodyweight before dosing parenteral antimicrobials. Year of exam and postgraduate training were the veterinary demographic factors associated with most treatment routines. The questions associated with most demographic factors were if antimicrobial treatment is affected by knowledge on earlier udder pathogens in the herd, and how often NSAID and follow-up of treatment using milk somatic cell count are used. Overall, the veterinarians followed the Swedish guidelines rather well, but discrepancies in need for improvement were found.

[1]  R. Smith,et al.  Visual weight estimation and the risk of underdosing dairy cattle , 2015, Veterinary Record.

[2]  Y. Persson,et al.  Efficacy of enrofloxacin for the treatment of acute clinical mastitis caused by Escherichia coli in dairy cows , 2015, Veterinary Record.

[3]  A. Lindberg,et al.  Nordic veterinarians' threshold for medical treatment of dairy cows, influence on disease recording and medicine use: mild clinical mastitis as an example. , 2013, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[4]  K. P. Waller,et al.  Farming practices in Sweden related to feeding milk and colostrum from cows treated with antimicrobials to dairy calves , 2013, Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica.

[5]  M. Herskin,et al.  Scandinavian bovine practitioners’ attitudes to the use of analgesics in cattle , 2010, Veterinary Record.

[6]  H. Simojoki,et al.  Efficacy of enrofloxacin in the treatment of naturally occurring acute clinical Escherichia coli mastitis. , 2010, Journal of dairy science.

[7]  S. McDougall,et al.  Effect of treatment with the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory meloxicam on milk production, somatic cell count, probability of re-treatment, and culling of dairy cows with mild clinical mastitis. , 2009, Journal of dairy science.

[8]  K. Stafford,et al.  Results of a survey of attitudes of dairy veterinarians in New Zealand regarding painful procedures and conditions in cattle , 2009, New Zealand veterinary journal.

[9]  A. Lindberg,et al.  Microbial aetiology of acute clinical mastitis and agent-specific risk factors. , 2009, Veterinary microbiology.

[10]  J. Huxley,et al.  Current attitudes of cattle practitioners to pain and the use of analgesics in cattle , 2006, Veterinary Record.

[11]  S. Taponen,et al.  Efficacy of Targeted 5-day Combined Parenteral and Intramammary Treatment of Clinical Mastitis Caused by Penicillin-Susceptible or Penicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus , 2003, Acta veterinaria Scandinavica.

[12]  G. Åström,et al.  Measures taken by Veterinarians in Sweden in Cases of Bovine Mastitis , 1994, Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica.

[13]  J B Cooper,et al.  Predicting body weight and wither height in Holstein heifers using body measurements. , 1992, Journal of dairy science.