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D.T. Scholl

Researcher at Université de Montréal

Publications -  40
Citations -  2032

D.T. Scholl is an academic researcher from Université de Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mastitis & Somatic cell count. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 40 publications receiving 1799 citations. Previous affiliations of D.T. Scholl include Louisiana State University Agricultural Center & South Dakota State University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence Rate of Clinical Mastitis on Canadian Dairy Farms

TL;DR: The focus of mastitis prevention and control programs should differ between regions and should be tailored to farms based on housing type and BMSCC.
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Invited review: Effect of udder health management practices on herd somatic cell count

TL;DR: A systematic review of the scientific literature on relationships between management practices used on dairy farms and herd somatic cell count (SCC) generates a more comprehensive understanding of the management practices influencing SCC and highlights areas of SCC control knowledge that lack evidence of effectiveness.
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Antimicrobial use on Canadian dairy farms.

TL;DR: Herd-level milk production was positively associated with overall ADUR, ADUR of systemically administered ceftiofur, cephapirin administered for dry cow therapy, and pirlimycin administered for clinical mastitis treatment, and β-lactams were most commonly used on Canadian dairy farms.
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The National Cohort of Dairy Farms--a data collection platform for mastitis research in Canada.

TL;DR: This paper describes the implementation and operation of the National Cohort of Dairy Farms (NCDF), explains its sampling protocols and data collection, and documents characteristics, strengths and limitations of these data for current and potential users.
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Antimicrobial resistance profiles of common mastitis pathogens on Canadian dairy farms

TL;DR: Prevalence of AMR in bovine mastitis pathogens was low; most gram-negative udder pathogens were multidrug resistant; MRSA was rarely found, and ESBL E. coli and Klebsiella species isolates were absent in Canadian milk samples.