ABSTRACT

Cartography and the mapping of vector-borne diseases are organized by their relativity to each other. Their strengths are derived from their basic approaches, with location being a principal attribute of the characterization of events. They are also a graphic way of thinking (Eisen and Lozano-Fuentes, 2009). Mapping diseases furthermore invites associations to the following bidirectionality, for example: If these disease cases are clustered around that lake, then that lake is central to these cases.