Tharindu Wickramaarachchi is a health economics modeller based in Melbourne. His research interests are modeling infectious disease transmission, and economic modeling of newborn, maternal and adolescent health programs. Prior to joining Burnet Institute, his work mainly focused on modelling of vector-borne diseases, particularly dengue virus transmission in Sri Lanka.
Tharindu has a background in applied mathematics with expertise in non-linear differential equations, mathematical formulation of real-world systems, and uncertainty quantification in multi-factor-driven systems and computing. He has a strong interest in applying his quantitative and modelling skills to solve problems in public health and to support evidence-based decision-making in Australia, Asia-Pacific and beyond. He has already collaborated to support resource allocation decision making in family planning, maternal health, adolescent health and child nutrition for countries such as Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Mongolia and the Philippines.
Tharindu also has experience in working collaboratively in multidisciplinary research groups within Burnet as well as with external organisations such as UNFPA and the World Bank.
Dengue has been a major public health concern in the tropical world for decades now. The dynamics of dengue disease transmission are complex and uncertain due to various external factors such as climate, human behavior, geography and demography. Fuzzy logic and fuzzy set theory are useful tools in mathematics to model systems under uncertainty where classical approaches are insufficient.
DEVELOPING A TWO DIMENSIONAL CLIMATE RISK MODEL FOR DENGUE DISEASE TRANSMISSION IN URBAN COLOMBO.Alexandria Engineering Journal
W.P.T.M. Wickramaarachchi
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine
W.P.T.M. Wickramaarachchi
Journal of the National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka
W.P.T.M. Wickramaarachchi