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Vaccinate for lungworm before turnout, cow farmers advised
Lungworm is becoming more active in adult cattle.

Cases and resistance against wormers continue to rise.

Cattle farmers are being urged to consider vaccinating their herds against lungworm before turnout, as cases continue to rise.

The advice comes after further research found that lungworm is continuing to develop resistance to commonly used wormers.

The study, from the University of Glasgow, saw evidence that lungworm was becoming more resistant to macrocyclic lactones (MLs) such as ivermectin and moxidectin. Data suggests that these drugs had failed to control lungworm infections amongst cattle.

Cattle become infested with lungworm when they graze pasture contaminated with larvae from Dictyocaulus viviparus. Ingested larvae will migrate to the lungs where it matures, reproduces and releases eggs.

These eggs are then coughed up, swallowed, and excreted, recontaminating the grazing environment.

Dr Kat Baxter-Smith, veterinary advisor with MSD Animal Health, says that vaccinations are key for controlling lungworm, enabling animals to build immunity. However, she says that pre-turnout vaccination has never been more important. 

The study reveals that lungworm has increased 10x by the mid-1990s. Between 2018 and 2024, diagnosed cases of parasitic pneumonia rose by 100 per cent across the UK.

Anecdotal reports and governmental data has also suggested that lungworm could be active in adult cattle, rather than just first- or second-season grazers.


Adult cattle can develop clinical diseases later in the season, often due to a lack of immunity. This lack of immunity is often the result of natural challenge, immunosuppression from other disease or very high worm burdens.

This makes it particularly important they are protected through vaccination.

Dr Baxter-Smith warns that routinely using wormers will encourage resistance to them. Meanwhile, vaccination will lead to immunity by providing controlled exposure to irradiated larvae.

Dr Baxter-Smith said: “Every farm is different. Talk to your vet about your grazing system, the age of animals at risk, and the worming policy you use,

“A vaccination plan tailored to your farm can help safeguard herd health, reduce financial losses, and protect the efficacy of the wormers we still have.”

Image © Labellepatine/Shutterstock

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Equine Disease Surveillance report released for Q4 2025

News Story 1
 The latest Equine Disease Surveillance report has been released, with details on equine disease from Q4 of 2025.

The report, produced by Equine Infectious Disease Surveillance, includes advice on rule changes for equine influenza vaccination.

Statistics and maps detail recent outbreaks of equine herpes virus, equine influenza, equine strangles and equine grass sickness. A series of laboratory reports provides data on virology, bacteriology, parasitology and toxicosis.

This issue also features a case study of orthoflavivus-associated neurological disease in a horse in the UK. 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
RCVS annual renewal fee for vets due

RCVS' annual renewal fee for veterinary surgeons is now due. Vets must pay their renewal fee before Wednesday, 1 April 2026.

This year's standard annual fee has increased to 431 from last year's 418. This is an approximately three per cent increase, as approved by RCVS Council and the Privy Council.

Tshidi Gardner, RCVS treasurer, said: "The small fee increase will be used to help deliver both our everyday activities and our new ambitious Strategic Plan, which includes aims such as achieving new legislation, reviewing the Codes of Professional Conduct and supporting guidance, and continuing to support the professions through activities such as the Mind Matters Initiative, RCVS Academy and career development."

A full breakdown of the new fees is on the RCVS website. Information about tax relief is available on the UK government website.