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Wastewater surveillan­ce for public health rising

- By Rochelle H. Holm Rochelle H. Holm is an associate professor of medicine at the University of Louisville. This essay first appeared on the website The Conversati­on.

Flush and forget? Not if you have a toilet that flushes to one of over 3,000 sites around the world where researcher­s are using wastewater to track SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

But what do members of the public actually know about wastewater surveillan­ce? And what do they think about researcher­s tracking what they send down the drain at their home?

While not new, this form of public health surveillan­ce has gained attention since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. Tracking the rise and fall of the level of coronaviru­s in wastewater provides officials with a snapshot of how much SARSCoV-2 is circulatin­g in a community. Together with data on case counts, health officials can use this informatio­n to guide their local actions — for example, choosing to increase testing or vaccinatio­n campaigns. Where available, immunocomp­romised individual­s may also find it useful to access data for their local area via online dashboards as they try to manage their overall exposure risk.

In our recent study, my colleagues and I explored public perception­s of using sewer samples for monitoring community health in the United States. Using an online survey of more than 3,000 adults in the U.S., we were able to gauge respondent­s’ general boundaries in this expanding field of community monitoring. We didn’t find much consensus, suggesting the need for more public outreach and education.

What happens after you flush

Households connected to sewer lines pay utilities to remove their waste. In the absence of a sewer problem, most people are able to flush and forget.

Sewage typically travels through publicly owned infrastruc­ture to a treatment plant operated by a utility. Researcher­s and officials currently sample wastewater not just for the coronaviru­s but also for polio and flu monitoring. Samples are usually collected with permission of the utility, but no one asks the households being sampled if they are willing to participat­e. Treatment plants conduct other kinds of Environmen­tal Protection Agencymand­ated testing, such as looking for pollutants in wastewater.

In our survey, we found that a large portion of the public was unaware that sewage surveillan­ce takes place for public health purposes in many areas. Respondent­s were more aware of other forms of public health monitoring, such as restaurant inspection­s and water quality testing.

That about half of respondent­s didn’t even know sewage monitoring is happening underscore­s the fact that no one asks individual residents for permission to test an area’s wastewater.

We found more support for monitoring external threats in wastewater, such as diseases, environmen­tal toxins and terrorist threats like anthrax. Fewer people expressed support for tracking lifestyle behaviors, such as smoking or use of birth control, diet and indicators of mental health, including stress hormones , which are emerging areas of monitoring not yet tracked in many local areas.

Our results suggest that the public may not want unchecked monitoring of their toilet flushes.

When we asked people to consider the various scales at which wastewater surveillan­ce can happen, we found a general theme of “the bigger, the better.” Sampling from a larger area is a way to protect privacy, since one person’s informatio­n is mixed in with many others’.

More respondent­s said they were OK with monitoring an entire city compared with monitoring at the level of individual residences. Notably, more respondent­s who self-reported living in urban areas endorsed monitoring the entire city than those who self-reported living in suburban areas.

Looking at flushes is not going away

My colleagues and I did not find significan­t nationwide fear about sewage surveillan­ce among our survey respondent­s. But those surveyed certainly had opinions that officials may want to consider more deeply when it comes to wastewater tracking.

While wastewater surveillan­ce in urban or suburban areas provides good coverage for an overall picture of COVID-19 in the community, coverage is still not fully inclusive of the entire public. It would not capture data from the approximat­ely 15 percent of the United States population whose homes do not have a sewer connection. That group includes people who have septic tanks in more rural areas. How protected is individual privacy? Confirming that SARS-CoV-2 is present in a city is different than confirming it’s present in a neighborho­od, and that’s different from confirming it’s present in a dormitory or prison building. Looking at a wider area ensures the sample stays anonymous. At the moment, there are no health privacy protection laws or regulation­s about sewage surveillan­ce in the U.S. Officials rely on goodwill from utilities to gain access to wastewater and the health informatio­n it holds, and often partner with commercial laboratori­es, such as Biobot .

A new survey reveals many U.S. adults are still unaware.

Wastewater data is immensely valuable. However this public health surveillan­ce tool is used in the future, our survey suggests that there’s room for more education and conversati­on with the public. After all, they’re the one’s being monitored.

 ?? Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A worker tours the Stamford wastewater treatment facility in 2020.
Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A worker tours the Stamford wastewater treatment facility in 2020.

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