National Post

U Guelph testing sewage at residences

Wastewater can reveal whether COVID present

- Denise Paglinawan

A university in southweste­rn Ontario is testing wastewater from campus residences for early signs of COVID-19 and expects to find out this week if new cases are cropping up.

The monitoring could help the Un i v e r s i t y of Guelph take early action against potential outbreaks of the novel coronaviru­s, said professor Lawrence Goodridge, who is leading the team of researcher­s carrying out the project.

“By testing wastewater, we capture anybody who is potentiall­y infected regardless of whether they’re showing symptoms or not,” Goodridge said in an interview Monday.

“The idea is that if you tested it and you find it, then you can take steps to hopefully stop an outbreak from happening.”

The testing detects levels of COVID-19 released in human feces, Goodridge said, and previous studies have

we capture anybody who is potentiall­y infected.

shown that the virus appears in wastewater around a week before a person starts showing symptoms.

Testing began last week at five campus residences, where a total of about 2,000 people live, Goodridge said. Results are expected this week that could signal potential new cases, he said.

The testing cannot, however, tell where in a building the virus is coming from, only that someone living there might be infected, Goodridge said.

“All we can say is that at least one person in this building is shedding the virus,” he said.

“But once we know that, there’s things that we can do.”

For example, he said, the university can set up a mobile testing unit to individual­ly test students from a certain residence and quarantine those found to be infected.

Goodridge said that approach has been taken already at several universiti­es in the United States.

He noted, however, that the wastewater testing is just an additional tool to detect COVID-19 and is not meant to replace individual testing done by health units.

“We believe that because we’ve seen effective use of it elsewhere around the world, although there’s still research questions to be asked, we can actually employ this right now,” he said.

Wastewater testing has been used around the world not just to look for new cases, but also to track the history of where the virus has been.

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