4.7 Article

Economic losses due to Johne's disease (paratuberculosis) in dairy cattle

期刊

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
卷 104, 期 3, 页码 3123-3143

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-19381

关键词

paratuberculosis; economic impact; Monte Carlo simulation; Markov process

资金

  1. Genome Canada
  2. Genome British Columbia [225RVA]
  3. Genome Prairie

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Johne's disease (JD), caused by Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) bacteria, leads to reduced milk production and economic losses in dairy cattle. The study estimated annual losses of approximately $33 per cow in MAP-infected herds, with total losses reaching millions of dollars in major dairy-producing regions like the United States, Germany, France, New Zealand, and Canada.
Johne's disease (JD), or paratuberculosis, is an infectious inflammatory disorder of the intestines primarily associated with domestic and wild ruminants including dairy cattle. The disease, caused by an infection with Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) bacteria, burdens both animals and producers through reduced milk production, premature culling, and reduced salvage values among MAP-infected animals. The economic losses associated with these burdens have been measured before, but not across a comprehensive selection of major dairy-producing regions within a single methodological framework. This study uses a Markov chain Monte Carlo approach to estimate the annual losses per cow within MAP-infected herds and the total regional losses due to JD by simulating the spread and economic impact of the disease with region-specific economic variables. It was estimated that approximately 1% of gross milk revenue, equivalent to US$33 per cow, is lost annually in MAP-infected dairy herds, with those losses primarily driven by reduced production and being higher in regions characterized by above-average farm-gate milk prices and production per cow. An estimated US$198 million is lost due to JD in dairy cattle in the United States annually, US$75 million in Germany, US$56 million in France, US$54 million in New Zealand, and between US$17 million and US$28 million in Canada, one of the smallest dairy-producing regions modeled.

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