Testimonials

Practical use of Myhealthyherd for Johne's control

Martin and Carol Beaumont, Shorn Hill Farm, Twycross

Taking Action to control the 'silent disease' before it takes hold in a herd. When they bought in stock to boost cow numbers, the Beaumonts got more than they'd bargained for – the introduction of Johne's to the herd. Although Johne's disease is by no means a big problem in Martin and Carol Beaumont's Holstein herd, by being proactive, they aim to make sure it never becomes a bigger issue."We started to notice a higher proportion of bought in cattle were leaving the farm as culls so we started looking for reasons for this and found that it quite often it surprised us as it was the big, fit cows that tested positive" says Mr Beaumont. "We discovered that although the herd was low risk, or green, for some diseases, it was scoring red for Johne's, says Mr. Orpin. Mr Beaumont stopped buying in cattle three years ago and says he would now only buy from herds that test for Johne's, as well as for other diseases, including BVD.

Click here to read more Farmers Guardian April 16 2010

Published - 11 December 2010

Reaping fertility benefit of tackling BVD head on

Eradicating BVD in Jeremy Harland’s 70 cow dairy herd has tightened up calving to conception intervals and helped cut overall fertility losses by 0.47ppl.

While even further savings from better health and fertility are likely, eliminating this virus has definitely left a lasting change in Mr. Harland’s approach to herd health and biosecurity.

To help establish the best strategy, Mrs Brown used a program which assessed the farm’s biosecurity strengths and weaknesses using a simple traffic light system. Mr Harland’s changes turned an initial red score into a mix of amber and green.

Calving to conception interval is now back down to 96 days from 140, and there are fewer cases of scour and pneumonia in calves.

Dairy Vet Magazine - December 2009

Published - 30 September 2010

Disease control drives on farm performance and stores price

"It is possible BVD-negative certified cattle will eventually attract a premium in the marketplace"

By taking a more preventive approach to livestock diseases, David Monkhouse says he has reduced his annual vet bill and lost fewer animals at Low Houslop, Bishop Auckland, Co. Durham.He credits his vet Debbie Brown, of Castle vets in Barnard Castle, of raising his awareness of the risk of transmissible diseases- particularly BVD in his suckler herd.Farmer members can register their livestock health data on the myhealthyherd website and compare their status with other registered herds.

Mr Monkhouse says the web based health scheme for which he signed up in December 2008, has proved a useful tool for managing the threat of contagious livestock diseases.

"After feed costs, the annual vet bill is one of the most expensive inputs on the farm" he says "

"A Preventive approach makes sense, because healthier livestock perform better and keep vet bills down to a minimum.

"As well as being better for welfare, it improves my job satisfaction"

 Click here to read more Beef Focus – Farmers Guardian November 20th 2009

Published - 27 August 2010

Trading Visas for vendors

Members of the myhealthyherd.com website can now get 'trading visas' to offer as a guarantee when selling stock.Farmers can print out certificates to offer to potential buyers as vet-approved evidence that cattle are disease free and protected as sold.The certificate employs the traffic light system with amber showing steps that have been taken to ensure disease protection.For farmers looking to tackle certain disease areas, the website also has a health evaluator to calculate the economic benefits and potential recoverable loss of putting a vaccination and biosecurity programme in place, compared to the threat posed by the disease.

Click here to read more Farmers Guardian - August 7 2009

Published - 19 July 2010