Author:
EDWARDS D. S.,CHRISTIANSEN K. H.,JOHNSTON A. M.,MEAD G. C.
Abstract
To investigate the feasibility of using information about the health and management of lambs
on farms to predict the risk of gross abnormalities at post-mortem meat inspection, 6732 lambs
from 30 different farms in Great Britain were followed through to slaughter in 1995/6. The
farm-level data were collected during farm visits at the beginning of the study. Routine meat
inspection findings for the lambs were obtained from the 10 participating abattoirs. The most
common abnormalities found during post-mortem inspection were pneumonia/pleurisy (53%
of cohorts), lungworm (40%), abscesses (30%), liver fluke (27%) and nephritis/nephrosis
(27%). The farm-level risk factors associated with abnormalities at slaughter varied with the
type of lesion. The most significant risk factor was the age of the lambs at slaughter. Lambs
slaughtered at an older age were more likely to have an abnormality, especially pneumonia,
abscesses and liver fluke. After age, environmental factors appeared to be better predictors of
those cohorts that would have lesions at slaughter than health and disease control variables.
However, a much larger study would be required to identify a set of farm-level factors that
adequately discriminated between lambs with high and low risks of lesion at slaughter. At the
end of the study, the farmers were informed of the meat inspection findings for their lambs
and a third indicated that they would improve their animal husbandry as a result of the
information.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
19 articles.
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