Deworming and Nutrition — Why They Go Together
08 Jul 2026 • Falah Enterprises
A dairy animal can be fed perfectly and still underperform if internal parasites are quietly consuming a share of every meal. Deworming and nutrition are not separate topics — they work together, and neglecting one undermines the other.
Why parasites undo good feeding
Internal parasites compete directly for nutrients, damage the gut lining that absorbs them, and can cause chronic low-grade blood loss. An animal with a heavy worm burden can eat a full, correct ration and still show poor growth, low milk yield, or a rough coat — because much of what she eats never gets properly absorbed.
Signs worth watching for
- Poor growth or weight despite adequate feeding
- Rough, dull coat
- Reduced milk yield without another clear cause
- Loose dung in some cases
Deworming schedules need a veterinarian
We're a feed distributor, not a veterinary pharmacy, and deworming products and schedules genuinely need to be set by a veterinarian based on your local parasite pressure, animal age, and pregnancy status. What we can speak to confidently is the nutrition side of the equation.
Supporting recovery through nutrition
After deworming, an animal often benefits from a nutrient-dense feed to help rebuild condition lost to the parasite burden — GOKA feeds matched to the animal's stage and yield support this recovery period well. Good nutrition doesn't replace deworming, and deworming doesn't replace good nutrition — an animal needs both working together to reach her real potential.
For feed guidance to support your herd's overall health program, call or WhatsApp Falah Enterprises, Anantnag.
