Unveiling the Potential of Sewage in Tracking Diseases Beyond COVID-19

Unveiling the Potential of Sewage in Tracking Diseases Beyond COVID-19




The future of ​disease tracking is going down the drain — literally. Flushed with success over​ detecting coronavirus in wastewater,⁢ and even specific variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, researchers are now eyeing our collective poop to monitor a wide variety of health threats.
Then COVID-19 hit.
The pandemic ‍triggered an “incredible acceleration” of wastewater science, says Adam Gushgari, an⁤ environmental engineer who before 2020 ⁢worked on ⁣testing wastewater for‍ opioids. He now develops a ⁣range of wastewater surveillance projects ‌for Eurofins Scientific, a global laboratory testing and research company headquartered in Luxembourg.
A subfield that was once ​a few handfuls of specialists has​ grown into more than enough scientists to pack a stadium, he says. And they come from a ​wide variety of fields —⁢ environmental science, analytical chemistry, microbiology, epidemiology and more — ⁤all collaborating to track the coronavirus, interpret the data ⁢and communicate results to the public.​ With other methods of monitoring COVID-19 ⁣on⁢ the decline, wastewater surveillance has become one of ‍health experts’ primary sources ‌for spotting new surges.

2023-09-20 08:00:00
Link from www.sciencenews.org

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