Title: David R' Smith, DVM, PhD
1Designing livestock production systems for One
Health
Planning for the health and well-being of man,
animals, and the environment
- David R. Smith, DVM, PhD
- University of NebraskaLincoln
2One Health and agriculture
- Animal health and well-being
- Human health and well-being
- Environmental health and well-being
- Food protection
- Safe (chemical, physical, microbiological)
- Secure (abundant)
- Defendable (agro-terrorism)
3One Health
Planning for the health and well-being of man,
animals, and the environment
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5Selection for antimicrobial resistance
6Responsible antibiotic use education
7Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
8Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
9Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
10Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
11Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
12Veterinarians Oath
- protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering - conservation of animal resources
- promotion of public health
- AVMA, 1999
13Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
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18Ashland County, OH
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20good surroundings and clothing, fresh air,
spirits of mindererus, sweet spirits of nitre,
tempting food, nux vomica, tonics, nutritious
food
21Dr. Hess Distemper, Fever, and Cough Remedy will
be found very beneficial in these cases
22Causal theoryHow do you know if a drug or a
vaccine works, or if a management practice causes
an animal health/performance effect?How do you
decide about acting on the information?
23Evidence-based medicine
- Time order
- Magnitude of association
- Consistency
- Biological gradient (dose effect)
- Coherence (biologically plausible)
Clinical Trials Process
Proof of concept
Safety, Immune response, Challenge studies
Safety, Dosage, Limited field studies
Does it really work? Large numbers
24Veterinarians Oath
I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge
and skills for the benefit of society through the
protection of animal health, the relief of animal
suffering, the conservation of animal resources,
the promotion of public health, and the
advancement of medical knowledge.
AVMA, 1999
25Neonatal calf diarrhea Death loss Performance
loss Treatment costs Labor,
medication Human toll Risk for injury,
frustration
26Neonatal calf diarrheaPublic Health Concerns
Zoonoses Salmonella
Cryptosporidia Antibiotic usage
27Sandhills Calving System reduces scours
Successful Farming John Walter and Betsy Freese
Jan 25, 2006
- In about an hour, Terry Clements finishes a
chore that has helped cut calf scours on his Loup
County, Nebraska, ranch to nonexistent -
28The Principles of Animal Hygiene and Preventive
Veterinary Medicine
- The faith in cures and the practice of
dealing with disease problems only after they
have arisen, which thousands of years of magic
and dosing have firmly establishedis
antagonistic to disease prevention -
- Leunis Van Es
- Lincoln, NE 1932
29Great advances in medicine
Kochs postulates of infectious disease causation
Flemings discovery of penicillin
Pasteurs pioneering work in germ theory and
immunology
30Great advances in medicine
Hippocrates 400 BC On Airs, Waters, and Places
Dr. John Snows pioneering work in modern
epidemiology
31John Snow, London cholera epidemic,1854
remove the handle from the Broad St. pump
32The McLean County System of Swine Sanitation
- Management system to control internal parasites
of young pigs - Based on farrowing hygiene and movement of sow
and pigs to clean pastures - Tested 1919-1926
- Reviewed- 1942 USDA Yearbook of Agriculture.
pp774-780
A
A. These large, healthy pigs were protected
from the ravages of parasites B. These unthrifty
pigs became parasitized soon after they
were born
B
33Nebraska Field Disease Research Diagnostic
investigation Field epidemiology Case-studies of
interventions
34Agents
- bacteria
- E. coli, Salmonella
- viruses
- rotavirus, coronavirus
- protozoa
- cryptosporidia
- fungi
- mycotic superinfection
35Agents of calf scours
- Diarrhea-causing organisms are common in cattle
populations - including herds without scours problems.
bovine coronavirus
cryptosporidia
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37The battle between exposure and immunity begins
at birth
38Immunity
Antibodies from colostrum
Age
Passive
39Immunity
Active immune response
Antibodies from colostrum
Age
Passive
Acquired
40Immunity
Window of vulnerability
Age
Passive
Acquired
41Immunity
Window of vulnerability
Scours
Exposure
Age
42Immunity
Scours
Exposure
0-5 6-10 11-15 16-20 21-25
26-30
Age in Days
43Age specificity of calf scours
- Population susceptible to scours calves 1-3
weeks of age
Also when calves become infective
44Nebraska Sandhills
45The Nebraska Sandhills consists of 19,600 square
miles of sand-dune formation covered by native
grassland.
46Nebraska Sandhills
47Arthur County, NE402 people/718 sq. mile (2004
est)29,705 cattle and calves (2002 USDA)
48Beef herd experiencing severe losses to calf
scours
- 402 cattle with live births, managed as a single
group intensive grazing - No treatment or control interventions
- 48 deaths due to scours
- An epidemiologically-pure scours epidemic
- and RECORDS!
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51Factors of the calf explaining death from scours
52Factors of the calf explaining death from scours
- Calves born on the day of a pasture-move were
more likely to die (OR1.9, p0.09)
53Age of the calf at death
54Age of death over time
Death in the same age-range throughout the
calving season
55Size of the at-risk population
56Weekly rates of mortality
Force of disease
neonatal diarrhea deaths / at-risk
57Proportion of the calves born each week that
eventually died from neonatal diarrhea
58- Levels of pathogen exposure increase over TIME
within a calving season
- Increasing ANIMAL DENSITY (more effective
contacts and environmental contamination) - MULTIPLIER EFFECT
- Cows - low level shedders
- Calves multiply pathogens to higher and higher
levels resulting in greater infectivity
59Multiplier Effect
60Biocontainment strategies for neonatal calf
diarrhea
- Eliminate the agent and keep it out
- Increase host resistance
- Colostrum!
- Prevent effective contacts older infective
calves and contaminated environment!
61Sandhills Calf Scours Project
Frequency of births
120
100
80
- Re-create the conditions existing at the start
of the calving season - Clean calving area
- Absence of older calves as a source of exposure
60
Count
40
20
0
5/1
5/8
5/15
5/22
5/29
6/5
6/12
6/19
6/26
7/3
More
5/2
5/9
5/16
5/23
5/30
6/6
6/13
6/20
6/27
7/4
Date
62Sandhills Calf Scours Project
Frequency of births
120
- Re-create the conditions at the start of the
calving season - Move pregnant cows to new calving pastures each
week - Minimize dose-load
- Improve maternal bonding
- Segregate calves by age to prevent the multiplier
effect
100
80
60
Count
40
20
0
5/1
5/8
5/15
5/22
5/29
6/5
6/12
6/19
6/26
7/3
More
5/2
5/9
5/16
5/23
5/30
6/6
6/13
6/20
6/27
7/4
Date
63Sandhills Calving SystemWeek 12
Calving Pasture
64Sandhills Calving System Week 3
Calving Pasture
1-2 week old Pairs
65Sandhills Calving System Week 4
1 week old pairs
Calving Pasture
2-3 week old pairs
66Sandhills Calving System Week 5
2 week old pairs
1 week old pairs
Calving Pasture
67Sandhills Calving System Week 6
Calving Pasture
2 week old pairs
1 week old pairs
68Sandhills Calving System Week 7
Calving Pasture
1 week old pairs
2 week old pairs
69Sandhills Calving System Week 8
Calving Pasture
1 week old pairs
2 week old pairs
70Sandhills Calving System Week 9
Calving Pasture -Finish out
1 week old pairs
2 week old pairs
Groups commingled after youngest calf is 4 weeks
of age
71Develop a plan
72- Less death and illness due to neonatal scours
(plt0.01) - Minimal to no treatment or antibiotic use
- 24-fold reduction in animal health expenses
(plt0.01)
73Sandhills Calving System reduces scours
Successful Farming John Walter and Betsy Freese
Jan 25, 2006
- "This is the number one thing I've done over the
years that has benefited us economically,"
Clements says.
74Veterinarians Oath
the protection of animal health, the relief of
animal suffering, the conservation of animal
resources, the promotion of public health
75Systems to prevent neonatal calf diarrhea reduces
the need for antibiotics
- Calf hutches on dairies
- Sandhills Calving System in beef herds
76Weaned calves
- Respiratory disease
- Weaning and commingling
- Liver abscesses
- Adaptation to new rations
77Backgrounding strategies can reduce the need for
antibiotics later
- Low-stress weaning
- Pre-stress vaccination
- Easy adaptation to new diets
78Dairy cattle
- Mastitis
- Contagious
- Environmental
- Lameness
- Nutrition
- Trauma
79Better diets, comfort, and sanitation prevent
mastitis and lameness and reduce the need for
antibiotics
80Milk quality is better today than it ever has been
81The Principles of Animal Hygiene and Preventive
Veterinary Medicine
- those more particularly concerned with the
food-producing animals must think in terms of
hygiene, for their success is in no small measure
dependent upon their knowledge of the subject - Leunis Van Es Lincoln, NE 1932
82http//vetext.unl.edu/ Search for sandhills
calving system