GIS for Health and the Environment
Proceedings of an International Workshop held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, 5–10 September 1994
edited by Don de Savigny and Pandu Wijeyaratne
ORDER: IDRC 1995, 182 pp., ISBN 0-88936-766-3, $25
RÉSUMÉ FRANÇAIS
At the first health conference to address geographic information systems
(GIS), researchers demonstrated that GIS data can be used to show a cause/effect
relationship between environmental conditions and health. Case studies
demonstrate how GIS can be used to monitor tropical diseases, water quality,
environmental toxicology and overall rural health.
Contents
Foreword — Don de Savigny, Luc Loslier,
and Jim Chauvin
Preface — Don de Savigny, Lori Jones-Arsenault,
and Pandu Wijeyaratne
Context
- The present state of GIS and future trends
— Steven Reader
- GIS from a health perspective — Luc
Loslier
- Spatial and temporal analysis of epidemiological
data — Flavio Fonseca Nobre
and Marilia Sa Carvalho
Case studies from the South
- Towards a rural information system — David
le Sueur, Sipho Ngxongo, Maria Stuttaford, Brian Sharp, Rajendra Maharaj,
Carrin Martin, and Dawn Brown
- A GIS approach to the determination of catchment
populations around Local Health Facilities in Developing Countries
— H.M. Oranga
- GIS management tools for the control of tropical
diseases: applications in Botswana, Senegal, and Morocco — Isabelle
Nuttall, D.W. Rumisha, T.R.K. Pilatwe, H.I. Ali, S.S. Mokgweetsinyana,
A.H. Sylla, and I. Talla
- The use of low-cost remote sensing and GIS for
identifying and monitoring the environmental factors associated with vector-borne
disease transmission — S.J. Connor, M.C. Thompson, S. Flasse, and J.B.
Williams
- GIS for the study and control of malaria
— Gustavo Bretas
- Spatial analysis of malaria risk in an endemic
region of Sri Lanka — D.M. Gunawardena, Lal Muthuwattac, S. Weerasingha,
J. Rajakaruna, Wasantha Udaya Kumara, Tilak Senanayaka, P. Kumar Kotta,
A.R. Wickremasinghe, Richard Carter, and Kamini N. Mendis
- Diagnostic features of malaria transmission in
Nadiad using remote sensing and GIS — M.S. Malhotra and Aruna Srivastava
- Monitoring zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis with
GIS — L. Mbarki, A. Ben Salah, S. Chlif, M.K. Chahed, A. Balma,
N. Chemam, A. Garraoui, and R. Ben-Ismail
- Use of RAISON for rural drinking water sources
management — C.W. Wang
Appendices
- Interests, problems, and needs of GIS users
in health: results of a small survey — Luc Loslier
- GIS, health, and epidemiology: an annotated resource
guide — Steven Reader
- Workshop agenda
- Workshop participants
ORDER: IDRC 1995, 182 pp., ISBN 0-88936-766-3, $25
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