Your search found 8 records
1 International Irrigation Management Institute (IIMI). 1998. National Water Conference on Status and Future Directions of Water Research in Sri Lanka, BMICH, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 4-6 November 1998. Session 4: Participatory management of irrigation; Session 5: Water resource data; Session 6: Managing water quality. Research papers presented. 151p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G744 INT Record No: H023497)
(0.13)
2 Perera, L. R.; Jinapala, K. 1998. Community management model for irrigation management transfer: Moraketiya DC7 in Embilipitiya Block of the Uda Walawe Project. Paper 99 of Session 4. In International Irrigation Management Institute (IIMI). National Water Conference on Status and Future Directions of Water Research in Sri Lanka, BMICH, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 4-6 November 1998. Session 4: Participatory management of irrigation; Session 5: Water resource data; Session 6: Managing water quality. Research papers presented. 25p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G744 INT Record No: H023501)
(1.17 MB)
3 Sanmuganathan, K.; Rajapakse, T. B. J.; Dissanayake, D. M. P. 1998. Advances in irrigation of sugarcane in Sri Lanka. Paper 12 of Session 21. In International Irrigation Management Institute (IIMI). National Water Conference on Status and Future Directions of Water Research in Sri Lanka, BMICH, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 4-6 November 1998. Session 19: Groundwater I; Session 20: Water management challenges; Session 21: Crop water use. Research papers presented. 9p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G744 INT Record No: H023555)
(0.33 MB)
4 McCall, M. (Ed.) 1990. Hambantota District environmental report. Report prepared by the HIRDEP Team(Hambantota Integrated Rural Development Programme), IRDP Office, Kachcheri, Hambantota, Sri Lanka. 125p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 5294 Record No: H024907)
5 Klinkenberg, E. (Ed.) 2001. Malaria risk mapping in Sri Lanka - Results from the Uda Walawe area: Proceedings of a workshop held in Embilipitiya, Sri Lanka, 29th March 2001. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI) iii, 46p. (IWMI Working Paper 021) [doi: https://doi.org/10.3910/2009.151]
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.5 G744 KLI Record No: H028254)
(10925 KB)
Proceedings of a workshop held in Embilipitiya, Sri Lanka, 29th March 2001. Presents preliminary findings on malaria patterns and possible risk factors and describes the progress of IWMI research towards developing a risk map for Sri Lanka. It also contains presentations by Regional Malaria Officers, and other officials involved in malaria control, on areas of high malaria risk within their districts.
6 Klinkenberg, E. 2001. Towards a risk map for Southern Sri Lanka: Results from the Uda Walawe Region. In Klinkenberg, E. (Ed.), Malaria risk mapping in Sri Lanka: Implications for its use in control - Proceedings of a workshop held at the International Water Management Institute, Colombo, 25 May 2001. Colombo, Sri Lanka: IWMI. pp.24-28. (IWMI Working Paper 29)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 616.9362 G744 KLI Record No: H029052)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6239 Record No: H031390)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 616.9362 G744 KLI Record No: H032713)
(3.15MB)
The transmission of malaria in Sri Lanka is unstable; its incidence greatly fluctuates from year to year and exhibits important variations within a year. Identification of the underlying risk factors of malaria is important to target the limited resources for the most-effective control of the disease. This report presents the first results of a project on malaria risk mapping to investigate whether this tool could be utilized to forecast malaria epidemics. It documents the key malaria risk factors for the Uda Walawe region of Sri Lanka, where monthly malaria incidence data were available over a 10-year period. In the study, data on aggregate malaria-incidence rates, land-use and water-use patterns, socioeconomic features and malaria-control interventions were collected and analyzed in a geographical information system. Malaria cases were mapped at the smallest administrative level and relative risks for different variables were calculated employing multivariate analyses. The findings of the study call for malaria-control strategies that are readily adapted to different ecological and epidemiological settings.
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