Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago, U. of I. embark on $2 million program to detect COVID in sewage

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase

The city’s Health Department will work with a team of University of Illinois researcher­s to monitor COVID-19 in wastewater as part of a $2 million program over the next two years.

The aim of the project is to collect sewage samples in order to detect the virus and potentiall­y predict future outbreaks. The virus is detectable in human waste from the beginning of infection well before symptoms show up in people, researcher­s say.

Measuring the amount of virus in sewage can point to community trends that help health officials pinpoint their response and control efforts during the pandemic.

“This and other data systems enable [the health department] to continue to focus our efforts on the communitie­s that need it most,” Chicago Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady said in a statement.

The Health Department is funding the program through $2.14 million provided by the federal government. The city is working the U. of I.’s Discovery Partners Institute.

The program will add to research from prior projects Discovery Partners embarked on, including developmen­t of a statewide wastewater monitoring system, and a privately funded program that analyzed sewer samples around Cook County Jail and O’Hare Airport.

Wastewater samples will be analyzed at U. of I. Chicago and genetic sequencing of the material will be conducted at Argonne National Lab to identify variants of the virus.

Illinois is seeing a surge in COVID cases, and health officials are worried that the Omicron variant, the latest version of the virus, will add to the crisis. Meanwhile, city health officials struggle to improve vaccinatio­n rates in many communitie­s even though there are ample vaccine supplies.

Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? City and University of Illinois researcher­s are going to analyze sewage samples for COVID-19 analysis over the next two years.
PROVIDED City and University of Illinois researcher­s are going to analyze sewage samples for COVID-19 analysis over the next two years.

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