New Deworming Recommendations for Horses
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New Deworming Recommendations for Horses: What Actually Works
By Dr Duncan Houston
For years, deworming horses was simple.
Every few months, every horse was treated, whether it needed it or not. That approach felt proactive, but it created a problem that is now affecting horses worldwide.
Parasite resistance.
Today, the biggest risk is no longer under-treating parasites. It is using dewormers too often and losing the ability to control parasites effectively at all.
This is why parasite control has changed. Modern recommendations are not about deworming more or less. They are about deworming correctly.
Quick Answer
Routine calendar-based deworming is outdated and contributes to parasite resistance. Modern parasite control uses fecal egg counts to identify which horses need treatment and when. This targeted approach reduces unnecessary drug use, slows resistance, and improves long-term effectiveness.
Quick Decision Guide
Horse is being dewormed on a fixed schedule without testing → outdated approach and higher resistance risk
Horse has regular fecal egg counts and targeted treatment → modern, effective parasite control
Horse has not been tested and relies on routine deworming → parasite status is unknown
Parasite eggs reappear quickly after treatment → resistance may be developing
No structured parasite plan in place → increased long-term risk to the horse and herd
What This Usually Turns Out To Be
When parasite control is reviewed on a farm, the situation usually falls into one of these:
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routine deworming without testing
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inconsistent or reactive treatment
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overuse of the same drug class
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lack of monitoring for resistance
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reliance on tradition rather than evidence
The mistake I see most often is continuing old routines simply because they have always been done that way.
Parasites have changed. Management needs to change with them.
Why Calendar-Based Deworming Is a Problem
Treating all horses at regular intervals means many horses receive medication they do not need.
This creates selection pressure.
Parasites that survive treatment pass on resistant traits. Over time, this reduces the effectiveness of commonly used dewormers.
The real concern is not just reduced efficacy today. It is losing effective treatments in the future.
What Vets Care About Most
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how often drugs are used
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whether treatment is necessary
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how quickly parasites return after treatment
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whether resistance is developing
The goal is to preserve drug effectiveness, not just eliminate parasites temporarily.
What the Research Has Shown
Field studies in Europe and elsewhere have shown that frequent deworming can lead to faster parasite rebound and reduced drug effectiveness.
When farms moved from routine deworming to targeted treatment based on fecal egg counts, they were able to:
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reduce total treatments
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maintain horse health
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slow the development of resistance
The key insight is simple.
Treating fewer horses, but treating the right ones, works better.
What Is a Fecal Egg Count?
A fecal egg count measures the number of parasite eggs in manure.
This allows horses to be grouped into:
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low shedders
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moderate shedders
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high shedders
Why It Matters
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identifies which horses need treatment
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reduces unnecessary drug use
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helps monitor resistance
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improves herd-level control
This is the foundation of modern parasite management.
Decision Checkpoint
If you are not testing, you are guessing.
How a Modern Deworming Plan Works
A typical evidence-based approach includes:
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fecal egg count testing every 3 to 6 months
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treating only moderate and high shedders
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monitoring how quickly eggs return after treatment
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adjusting strategy based on results
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maintaining pasture hygiene
This approach is more precise and more sustainable.
Do All Horses Need the Same Treatment?
No.
Parasite burden varies between individuals.
Some horses consistently carry higher parasite loads and require more frequent treatment. Others remain low shedders and need minimal intervention.
Younger Horses
Younger horses often have less developed immunity and may require more frequent monitoring and treatment.
This is normal, but treatment should still be guided by testing, not routine.
Warning Signs of Resistance
Resistance should be suspected if:
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eggs return sooner than expected after treatment
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the same product is used repeatedly without testing
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treatment appears less effective over time
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herd parasite levels remain high despite regular deworming
Resistance does not appear suddenly. It develops gradually and is often missed until it becomes significant.
Severity Framework
| Severity | What It Looks Like | What It May Mean | What To Do |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low concern | Low egg counts, good condition, consistent management | Parasite control is effective | Continue monitoring and targeted treatment |
| Moderate concern | Variable egg counts, occasional need for treatment | Control is reasonable but could improve | Adjust testing frequency and strategy |
| High concern | High egg counts, repeated treatments needed, inconsistent results | Parasite burden is rising or control is poor | Veterinary-guided plan needed |
| Urgent concern | Weight loss, diarrhea, poor condition, colic signs | Heavy parasite burden or complication | Immediate veterinary assessment |
What Actually Makes the Biggest Difference
Effective parasite control is not just about medication.
It depends on:
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targeted treatment
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pasture management
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manure removal
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stocking density
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monitoring over time
Medication is one part of the system, not the entire solution.
Common Mistakes Owners Make
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deworming on a fixed schedule without testing
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using the same drug repeatedly
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not checking whether treatment worked
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ignoring pasture contamination
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assuming all horses need equal treatment
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reacting only after problems appear
The biggest mistake is not measuring parasite burden before treating.
What Should You Do Right Now?
If you want to improve your parasite control plan:
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Start with a fecal egg count
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Identify high and low shedders
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Treat only when indicated
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Monitor response to treatment
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Review pasture management
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Repeat testing at appropriate intervals
Simple checkpoint:
tested, targeted approach → effective and sustainable
routine deworming without testing → increasing risk of resistance
When Is This an Emergency?
Seek veterinary attention if your horse shows:
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weight loss
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diarrhea
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colic signs
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poor growth in young horses
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signs of heavy parasite burden
These situations require proper diagnosis and treatment, not routine deworming.
Prevention and Long-Term Control
Long-term success comes from consistency:
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regular fecal egg counts
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targeted treatment
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good pasture hygiene
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reduced reinfection pressure
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monitoring changes over time
This approach protects both individual horses and the wider population.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I deworm my horse?
It depends on fecal egg count results. Many horses only require 1 to 2 treatments per year.
Is routine deworming still recommended?
No. Calendar-based deworming is outdated and contributes to resistance.
Do all horses need the same deworming schedule?
No. Treatment should be based on individual parasite burden.
What is the biggest risk with over-deworming?
Parasite resistance, which reduces drug effectiveness over time.
Are fecal egg counts necessary?
Yes. They are essential for modern, evidence-based parasite control.
Final Thoughts
Parasite control has shifted from routine to strategic.
The goal is no longer to eliminate parasites completely. It is to control them effectively while preserving the tools we have.
Deworming less is not the point.
Deworming correctly is.
If you want help interpreting fecal egg counts, building a parasite plan, or understanding resistance risk on your property, ASK A VET™ can help you create a clear, practical strategy tailored to your horse.