Added Value of Meat Inspection Data for Monitoring of Dairy Cattle Health in the Netherlands

Anouk M.B. Veldhuis*, Debora Smits, Martijn Bouwknegt, Heleen Worm, Gerdien van Schaik

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Meat inspection records of one large cattle slaughterhouse were analyzed to evaluate the added value of slaughterhouse data for cattle health surveillance in the Netherlands. Data were available from January 2015 to September 2018, consisting of 467,361 meat inspection records. Analyses included (1) an assessment of the representativeness of the cattle herds in the slaughterhouse data in relation to the cattle herd population in the Netherlands, and (2) multivariable analyses to quantify associations between meat inspection findings and farm of origin characteristics, and the trends in time of the findings in slaughtered cattle. Ninety percent of the meat inspection records originated from dairy cattle therefore this paper only presents the results of dairy herds (N = 422,194 cattle). The dairy herds in the slaughterhouse data seemed representative for the Dutch dairy population although their regional coverage differed from the distribution of dairy herds in the Netherlands. Non-dairy herds were underrepresented in the slaughterhouse data which stresses the importance of the inclusion of data from other slaughterhouses that may be more specialized in slaughtering beef cattle. Inspection records were categorized into 15 indicators related to ante-mortem and post-mortem findings. Following multivariable analyses, seven indicators were deemed of added value to existing cattle health surveillance components, as they provided either new information or information regarding specific health problems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number661459
Pages (from-to)1-11
JournalFrontiers in Veterinary Science
Volume8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jul 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This study was commissioned by the Southern Agriculture and Horticulture Organization (ZLTO) and financed by DairyNL, the organization of the Dutch dairy supply chain.

Funding Information:
Correct interpretation of the slaughterhouse data was achieved through the valuable input of P. Jacobs (NVWA), D. Oorburg (Vion) and W. van Roessel (Vion), for which we are grateful. Funding. This study was commissioned by the Southern Agriculture and Horticulture Organization (ZLTO) and financed by DairyNL, the organization of the Dutch dairy supply chain.

Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Veldhuis, Smits, Bouwknegt, Worm and van Schaik.

Funding

Correct interpretation of the slaughterhouse data was achieved through the valuable input of P. Jacobs (NVWA), D. Oorburg (Vion) and W. van Roessel (Vion), for which we are grateful. Funding. This study was commissioned by the Southern Agriculture and Horticulture Organization (ZLTO) and financed by DairyNL, the organization of the Dutch dairy supply chain.

Keywords

  • cattle
  • health
  • meat inspection
  • surveillance
  • trend analysis

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