|  21/06/07
          
           Making sure all incoming sheep are quarantined for at least three
            weeks and securing an accurate diagnosis of any ectoparasite problems
            are absolutely crucial if the industry is to maintain any momentum
            in its campaign to eradicate sheep scab.
           
			
			Dipping must take place more than  
			14 days after drenching. 
			 
			
            
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           Independent sheep consultant Lesley Stubbings stresses that
            flocks are at their most vulnerable to sheep scab - and many other
            diseases - when they bring sheep into the flock. She is urging sheep
            farmers to minimise these risks by sticking to a strict quarantine
            period, as recommended by SCOPS. 
            “Every sheep coming onto the farm is a real threat and must
              be tackled responsibly - a minimum quarantine period of three to
              four weeks is essential. During this time they should be treated
              with both a levamisole (yellow) and macro-cyclic lactone (clear)
              wormer to remove any resistant worms and, ideally, also treated
              against scab. Remember, though, that if you are planning to use
              an OP dip, dipping must take place more than 14 days after drenching,” she
              points out. 
            Lesley Stubbings also says that producers need to work closely
              with their vet to secure an accurate diagnosis of ectoparasite
              problems within the flock. “It is vital that we use the control
              options available to us (OP dip, the injectables and pour-ons)
              very carefully. It’s no good using an injectable just because
              you think you have a scab problem. If the problem is not scab -
              and is lice, for example - the injectable will be ineffective and
              you will simply have hastened the day when intestinal worms become
              resistant to these products.” 
            For effective scab control, independent sheep vet Chris Lewis
              recommends a move back to OPs, particularly now that the introduction
              of genuinely closed-transfer systems - such as the water-soluble
              sachet-based approach favoured by Coopers Ectoforce - means dippers
              can no longer come into direct contact with the diazinon concentrate.
              Indeed, since the advent of these systems, there have been no further
              human adverse reaction reports to the VMD, he points out. 
            “Used responsibly, plunge dipping with an OP is the gold
              standard sheep ectoparasite control system, with no recorded resistance.
              If you use an OP correctly you can be confident you will get rid
              of scab and protect your sheep against further infestation for
              up to 4 weeks. OPs are also fully effective against lice and keds
              too, and have a short withdrawal period at only 35 days,” he
              explains. 
              
              Chris Lewis also points out that sheep producers have a real opportunity
                to crack down early on scab this year by using an OP dip for
                summer blowfly control. “Apart from effective blowfly control,
                OPs also kill any scab mites persisting on the body during the
                warmer months,” he says. 
            “The mites are found in the groin, around the tail head,
              in the fissure near the eye, and in the ears. Then, when the temperature
              falls, the mites migrate back onto the body to produce clinical
              scab. As scab is highly contagious, these sheep then become a source
              of infection for the whole flock. And it is often these sheep that
              are the most common cause of new scab outbreaks in apparently isolated
              flocks,” he explains. 
            
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