World News

Study: Could sewage monitoring help track Covid-19 hotspots?

Published

on

Microbiologist Dr Pattanathu Rahman

Scientists suggest the Covid-19 virus could be tracked through a closer watch on sewage systems worldwide.

The virus has been detected in the faeces of patients with coronavirus in the Netherlands, USA, France and Australia.

Dr Pattanathu Rahman, a microbiologist at the University of Portsmouth and Director of TeeGene, and colleagues at Bharathiar University, India argue that monitoring of wastewater for the coronavirus is the next step.

The results could give health authorities advance warning of further outbreaks.

Their research is published in Current Opinion in Environmental Science & Health

Advertisement

Dr Rahman said: “Despite the advancements being made in medicine and research, it is proving difficult to contain this virus.

“It’s highly likely that the virus, SARS-CoV-2, survives in wastewater, so we looked at using nanofiber filters as a wastewater pre-treatment routine and the upgrade of existing wastewater evaluation and treatment systems to serve as a surveillance tool.

“It’s nearly impossible to test every individual in a pandemic, so it’s critical we locate the hotspots of the disease and begin isolation and treatment from there.”

Environmental monitoring has previously been used to track and help eliminate viruses including poliovirus and aichivirus.

Being able to monitor effectively depends on a wide range of factors, including sanitary and climatic conditions, sampling methods, rainfall and filters. Assuming a wastewater treatment station anywhere in the world could be regularly monitored, the major shortcoming of such testing is individuals couldn’t be identified and a positive result would merely indicate that the virus was active in a particular population.

Advertisement

Dr Rahman said: “Water treatment systems play a significant role in public health protection.

“Treated wastewater has a wide range of uses from drinking water, to being used for irrigation and food production. There is significant risk the virus can be transmitted through sewage and it’s possible slimy bacteria that forms a thin coat over sewage pipelines could help spread of the virus.”

The University of Portsmouth is a progressive and dynamic university with an outstanding reputation for innovative teaching and globally significant research and innovation.

It was rated ‘Gold’ in the UK government’s Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) and was ranked in the top 150 under 50 in the world according to the Times Higher Education rankings. The University is also 21st in the Guardian’s 2020 league table and was ranked number one in the UK for boosting graduate salaries according to The Economist.

 

Advertisement

The University’s research and innovation culture is impacting lives today and in the future and addressing local, national and global challenges across science, technology, humanities, business and creative industries. http://www.port.ac.uk/

Trending

Exit mobile version