Abstract

The Journal is the primary organ of Continuing Paediatric Medical Education in Sri Lanka. The journal also has a website. Free full text access is available for all readers.The Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health is now indexed in SciVerse Scopus (Source Record ID 19900193609), Index Medicus for South-East Asia Region (IMSEAR), CABI (Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International Global Health Database), DOAJ and is available in Google, as well as Google Scholar.The policies of the journal are modelled on the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) Guidelines on Principles of Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing. Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health is recognised by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) as a publication following the ICMJE Recommendations.

Highlights

  • Annual detection rate of enteric adenovirus associated acute gastroenteritis in paediatric patients and rainfall: an appraisal on relationship from an Indochina country

  • The data on local total rainfall is according to Royal Department of Irrigation

  • The detection rate of enteric adenovirus associated acute gastroenteritis in paediatric patients is non-significantly negatively related to annual overall rainfall (r = -0.64)

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Summary

Introduction

Annual detection rate of enteric adenovirus associated acute gastroenteritis in paediatric patients and rainfall: an appraisal on relationship from an Indochina country Dear Editors, Acute gastroenteritis is an important clinical problem in paediatrics. Enteric adenovirus associated acute gastroenteritis is a common infectious disease in many developing countries[1].

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