AUTHOR=Rashid Muhammad , Zahra Naveed , Chudhary Amna , Rehman Tauseef Ur , Aleem Muhammad Tahir , Alouffi Abdulaziz , Mohammed Aymen , Rashid Muhammad Imran , Ehsan Muhammad , Malik Muhammad Irfan , Hussain Dilber Ghulam , Bakhsh Amir , Almutairi Mashal M. TITLE=Cost-benefit ratio of anthelmintic treatment and its comparative efficacy in commercial dairy farms JOURNAL=Frontiers in Veterinary Science VOLUME=9 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2022.1047497 DOI=10.3389/fvets.2022.1047497 ISSN=2297-1769 ABSTRACT=
Intestinal parasitic infection is one of the major challenges in obtaining optimal production and maintaining the health and welfare of all animals including cattle and buffaloes. Anti-parasitic treatments appear to be a reliable countermeasure. However, the effectiveness and selection of suitable anthelmintics require situational assessments in a given locality. In the current study, the efficacy and impact of benzimidazole (albendazole) were assessed in a total of 400 (100 each) on the performance of buffaloes, buffalo-heifer, cattle, and cattle-heifers at two commercial dairy farms in the Province of Punjab, Pakistan. Additionally, the cost-benefit ratio was calculated by assessing the inputs (medication, feed, and labor cost) and outputs (milk and weight gain). The qualitative and quantitative examination of helminth eggs in each type of animal indicated a prevalence of 73.3, 78.3, 76.6, and 85.0% in cattle, cattle-heifers, buffaloes, and buffaloes-heifers, respectively. Specifically, a highest rate (10.0–13.3%) of