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Functionality and Interfaces of a Herd Health Decision Support System for Practising Dairy Cattle Veterinarians in New Zealand

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Alawneh, J. I., Henning, J. and Olchowy, T. W. J. (2018) Functionality and Interfaces of a Herd Health Decision Support System for Practising Dairy Cattle Veterinarians in New Zealand. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 5 , 3046. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2018.00021

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Article Link: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2018.00021

['eprint_fieldopt_related_url_type_' not defined] URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-82357-3

Abstract

Decision-making processes to assess and improve the health of dairy herds are often unstructured due to the complexity of interactions that exist between the health and productivity of the herd, for which there are no ready to hand solutions. Decisions made in the face of these complex herd health problems are often based on the experience and perceptions of what might be a quick or the easiest solution. To shift from this unstructured process to semistructured decision-making requires a more holistic understanding of potential health problems and access to herd productivity information and to analytical methods suitable for examining and evaluating such data. Technological advances in agriculture have made the development of such information technology systems both possible and relatively accessible to decision makers working with dairy herds (e.g., veterinarians). The timely access and appropriate analysis of herd productivity data provides the herd health advisor with the opportunity to track and benchmark the performance of dairy herds. Thus, a decision support system (DSS) will use best available evidence to guide the allocation of resources to specific, most promising herd health interventions. This article presents an example of a DSS-based on collection of data and algorithm of analysis. © 2018 Alawneh, Henning and Olchowy.

Item Type:Article
Corporate Creators:Department of Primary Industries, Queensland
Business groups:Biosecurity Queensland
Subjects:Animal culture > Cattle > Dairying
Technology > Technology (General)
Live Archive:05 Sep 2025 01:55
Last Modified:05 Sep 2025 01:55

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