Directrices para prever las consecuencias de las obras de desarrollo de los recursos h'idricos en cuanto a las enfermedades transmitidas por vectores / preparado por Martin H. Birley, 2a ed
Citation
Birley, Martin H, World Health Organization. Community Water Supply and Sanitation Unit & WHO/FAO/UNEP/UNCHS Panel of Experts on Environmental Management for Vector Control. (1992). Directrices para prever las consecuencias de las obras de desarrollo de los recursos h'idricos en cuanto a las enfermedades transmitidas por vectores / preparado por Martin H. Birley, 2a ed. Ginebra : Organización Mundial de la Salud. http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/61807
Relation
Serie de directrices CEOM ; 2
Description
WHO/CWS/91.31v. (various pagings).
Gov't Doc #
WHO/CWS/91.3Collections
Language
Englishfrançais
español
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title and MeSH subject.
-
Health opportunities in water resources development : with special emphasis on the prevention and control of water associated vector-borne diseases, report of a training course in Darwendale, Zimbabwe from 7 to 18 September 1992 / organized by the Joint WHO/FAO/UNEP/UNCHS Panel of Experts on Environmental Management for Vector Control (PEEM), the Danish Bilharziasis Laboratory and the Blair Research Institute
World Health Organization. Community Water Supply and Sanitation Unit; WHO/FAO/UNEP/UNCHS Panel of Experts on Environmental Management for Vector Control; Danish Bilharziasis Laboratory; Blair Research Institute (WHO/CWS/93.2. Unpublished, 1993) -
Vector-borne disease problems in rapid urbanization : new approaches to vector control / A. B. Knudsen & R. Slooff
Knudsen, A. Bruce; Slooff, Rudolf (1992) -
Integrated vector control : seventh report of the WHO Expert Committee on Vector Biology and Control [meeting held in Geneva from 7 to 13 December 1982]
WHO Expert Committee on Vector Biology and Control; World Health Organization (1983)Maps out strategies for improving the effectiveness of vector control despite the challenge of increasing costs, pesticide resistance, public opposition, and the uncontrolled growth of towns and cities. The opening sections review the status of vector control throughout the world and compare the organization of vector control services in different countries. Against this background, the report outlines the principles of integrated vector control, arguing for the need to move away from campaigns against single vectors or groups of vectors and to ...