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Animal Health – The Scientist

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2017

D.S. Edwards
Affiliation:
The Royal Veterinary College, University of London, Boltons Park, 44 Hawkshead Road, Potters Bar, Herts EN6 1NB, U.K
A.M. Johnston
Affiliation:
The Royal Veterinary College, University of London, Boltons Park, 44 Hawkshead Road, Potters Bar, Herts EN6 1NB, U.K
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Extract

Food animal health impacts on productivity, animal welfare and human health. What happens to an animal on the farm and its resulting health status has an important influence on the quality, safety and wholesomeness of the meat and offal obtained from that animal. Our research has largely been focused on the environmental influences on beef cattle and sheep health, the farm environment and management, in particular and how it impacts on veterinary public health, i.e. food safety, and animal welfare. The main objective of the study was to examine the use of information about the health and management of cattle and lambs on the farm to predict the risk of visible lesions at slaughter. Th e feasibility of identifying farm-level risk factors for gross lesions detectable during post-mortem meat inspection has been investigated, from which the findings of the sheep study have been published (Edwards, et al. 1999).

Type
Invited Theatre Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © The British Society of Animal Science 2001

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References

Edwards, D.S., Christiansen, K.H., Johnston, A.M. and Mead, G.C. 1999. Determination of farm-level risk factors for abnormalities observed during post-mortem meat inspection of lambs: a feasability study. Epidemiology and Infection 123: 109119.Google Scholar
Kabagambe, E.K., Wells, S.J., Garber, L.P., Salman, M.D., Wagner, B. and Fedorka-Cray, P.J. 2000. Risk for fecal shedding of Salmonella in 91 US dairy herds in 1996. Preventive Veterinary Medicine 43: 177194.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
SERC (Statistics and Epidemiology Research Corporation), 1991. Egret Reference Manual, Revision 2. SERC, Seattle, Washington.Google Scholar