Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2453550 | Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2007 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
All frailty terms were highly significant, regardless of whether it was an individual frailty at the lactation level or a shared frailty at the cow or herd level, suggesting that there was considerable heterogeneity within these levels. Inclusion of a frailty term at the herd level changed the estimate for the contract breeding program considerably, while a frailty term on other levels did not, indicating that herd characteristics (e.g., overall management) have a substantial impact on reproductive performance and should be accounted for in the analysis. Interpretation using time ratios with or without a shared herd frailty found that the contract breeding program was associated with a reduction of 6.5% and 14.1% in mean time to pregnancy, respectively.
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Authors
Cheyney Meadows, Päivi J. Rajala-Schultz, Grant S. Frazer, Gary Phillips, Richard W. Meiring, Kent H. Hoblet,