12 results match your criteria: "International Irrigation Management Institute[Affiliation]"
Soc Sci Med
March 2000
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Early diagnosis and treatment of malaria cases is one of the basic elements of the current global malaria control strategy. In order to provide this service to people in rural areas there is a need for new cost-effective approaches. To ensure that such new approaches are acceptable to the target communities, it is important to know the rationale for people's malaria treatment-seeking behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull World Health Organ
June 1999
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
The study provides estimates of the cost of various malaria control measures in an area of North-Central Province of Sri Lanka where the disease is endemic. We assumed that each measure was equally effective. In these terms, impregnating privately purchased bednets with insecticide was estimated to cost Rs 48 (US(40.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoutheast Asian J Trop Med Public Health
June 1998
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
To assess the possibility of developing a protocol for the clinical diagnosis of malaria, a study was done at the regional laboratory of the Anti-Malaria Campaign in Puttalam, Sri Lanka. Of a group of 502 patients, who suspected they were suffering from malaria, 97 had a positive blood film for malaria parasites (71 Plasmodium vivax and 26 P. falciparum).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
December 1998
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Environmental and socioeconomic risk factors for malaria were studied in a village in Sri Lanka. Over a period of one year, all 49 households in the village were visited every alternate day to obtain information on malaria episodes. Information on risk factors was obtained through questionnaires and direct observations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Trop
September 1998
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
This paper assesses the options for control of malaria vectors through different water management practices in a natural stream in Sri Lanka. The association between water level in the stream and breeding of the immature stages of the primary vector Anopheles culicifacies was investigated and the feasibility of using existing irrigation infrastructure to reduce the breeding potential discussed. The most feasible option would be to implement a management routine where water is released periodically from an upstream reservoir to reduce the number of breeding sites downstream.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoutheast Asian J Trop Med Public Health
March 1998
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
In and around a village in the Anuradhapura District of Sri Lanka anopheline larvae were sampled from July 1994 to April 1996 in all surface water bodies. Samples positive for Anopheles culicifacies, the established vector of malaria in Sri Lanka, and for An. barbirostris, An.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Trop Med Parasitol
December 1997
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Am J Trop Med Hyg
June 1997
International Irrigation Management Institute Colombo, Sri Lanka.
The economic cost at the household level of labor days lost due to malaria and other illnesses was estimated in a rural community in Sri Lanka. Over a one-year period, 223 episodes of malaria were recorded from the 298 inhabitants of the village. Based on daily activity records, the economically active age group was defined as 14-60 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
July 1997
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
A study of the cost of malaria at the household level, community perceptions, preventive measures and illness behaviour linked to the disease was undertaken in 5 villages in the dry zone of Sri Lanka. The surveyed community had a high knowledge of malaria, although side effects of antimalarial drugs were often confused with symptoms of the disease. The community sought prompt diagnosis and treatment at 'western-type' facilities, with 84% making use of government facilities as their first choice and 16% preferring private facilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld Health Forum
September 1997
International Irrigation Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
When the agricultural sector takes measures to diminish water losses, access to water for domestic purposes may be greatly reduced and community health may be adversely affected.
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