Prairie Post (West Edition)

An(other) Ounce of Prevention

- BY DR. REYNOLD BERGEN This article written by Dr. Reynold Bergen, BCRC Science Director, originally appeared in the September 2020 issue of Canadian Cattlemen magazine and is reprinted on the BCRC Blog with permission of the publisher.

My first fire drill in grade one was absolute chaos, screaming and panic as we all circled the teacher, who was likely wondering how our parents had managed to keep us alive this long. By grade three, we yawned and strolled to the nearest door. Fire drills teach kids what to do when there’s no real threat, so that they react calmly and automatica­lly if a real fire happens. Fire drills save lives. Vaccines are for disease what fire drills are for kids. When an animal is exposed to a disease-causing microbe, the immune system activates a variety of self-defence weapons to combat it. The immune system often responds a bit slowly the first time the microbe is encountere­d, because it’s starting from scratch. But the immune system has a “memory” that allows it to respond much more quickly and automatica­lly the next time that microbe re-appears.

Like a fire drill, a vaccine mimics exposure to disease-causing microbes without causing the disease. Nearly all vaccines recommend two doses, given a few weeks apart. The initial vaccinatio­n is like the fire drill in grade one. It teaches the animal’s immune system to recognize particular features of a microbe that causes a specific disease. The second “booster” dose given a few weeks later is like the fire drill in grade three. It stimulates the immune system’s memory and generates a much stronger and long-lasting immune response and enables the immune system to spring into action if the microbe itself appears. Reproducti­ve diseases also require an annual booster for the breeding herd. Proper vaccinatio­n allows the animal’s immune system to respond much more quickly, automatica­lly and effectivel­y when a real disease challenge occurs.

Vaccines are getting better. Modified live vaccines provide longer-lasting protection than killed vaccines. “Multivalen­t” vaccines allow protection against multiple diseases at the same time. Nasal and oral vaccines allow calves to be vaccinated earlier in life, without needles. Vaccines are an important part of a preventati­ve herd health program, but they aren’t a silver bullet. They won’t eliminate disease, but they do reduce the risk, and are much more affordable than trying to gain the upper hand on an uncontroll­ed disease outbreak. Vaccines need to be handled and administer­ed properly and work best when combined with other best management practices in areas like nutrition, animal handling, and biosecurit­y.

Dr. Cheryl Waldner and coworkers from the Western College of Veterinary Medicine recently published a study on Vaccine usage in western Canadian cow-calf herds (Can. Vet. J. 60:414442).

What They Did: The team surveyed producers participat­ing in the Western Canadian Cow-Calf Surveillan­ce Network in early 2017. Participan­ts were given a handbook that included color pictures and product names of vaccines approved for use in Canada and were asked to identify which vaccines they’d used (and when) for cows, heifers, bulls and calves in the 2016 calendar year.

What They Learned: The vast majority of producers vaccinated both cows (91%) and replacemen­t heifers (96%) against BVD and IBR, which can cause reproducti­ve failure; fewer vaccinated bulls for these diseases (55%). Most of these would have been annual booster vaccinatio­ns.

Nearly all producers vaccinated calves against clostridia­l diseases (97%). Most producers vaccinated calves against BVD (82%) and IBR (85%) at least once; many of these vaccines also provide protection against the PI3 and BRSV respirator­y viruses. But only about a third of operations provided a second (or booster) vaccinatio­n against any of these diseases. That means that the vaccines are likely only providing partial protection against respirator­y disease.

What it Means: Vaccinatio­n rates are going up in western Canadian cow-calf operations. Earlier studies reported vaccinatio­n rates below 50% for reproducti­ve diseases in cows and heifers, below 90% for clostridia­l diseases, and below 50% for respirator­y diseases in calves.

Vaccines that protect against diseases that cause abortion or infertilit­y in cows (like BVD and IBR) or easily preventabl­e diseases (e.g. clostridia­l diseases) are understand­ably top of mind for most cow-calf producers. So, it’s not particular­ly surprising that vaccinatio­n rates are high and annual boosters are common in the cow herd.

It’s also encouragin­g to see the increase in vaccinatio­n rates against respirator­y viruses in calves. Bovine respirator­y disease is often considered a “feedlot disease”, but it’s also a leading reason for antibiotic use on Canadian cow-calf operations. A 2013 study (Antimicrob­ial usage in western Canadian cowcalf herds; Can. Vet. J. 60:255–267) found that up to 77% of Canadian cow-calf operations used antibiotic­s to treat up to a third of their calves for respirator­y disease either before or after weaning. All those individual treatments still add up to significan­t time, effort, and expense. Providing calves with the recommende­d booster against respirator­y viruses like BVD, IBR, PI3 and BRSV will help reduce the need for antibiotic treatments before the calves leave the farm.

Now would be a really good time to provide that booster vaccinatio­n. Spending a few hours on a ‘fire drill’ now will save time and money pulling treating individual calves in fall when you have other things to do. Fire drills save lives.

The Beef Cattle Research Council is funded by the Canadian Beef Cattle Check-Off. The BCRC partners with Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada, provincial beef industry groups and government­s to advance research and technology transfer supporting the Canadian beef industry’s vision to be recognized as a preferred supplier of healthy, high quality beef, cattle and genetics.

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