Tag Archives: Environmental Pollution

For Future Viral Threats, Health Officials Look to Sewage

When the virologist Kirsten St. George learned last summer that a paralyzed patient in New York’s Rockland County had tested positive for polio, she turned her attention to the state’s sewers.

Polio is particularly stealthy because most infected people never develop symptoms but can still spread the virus. A wastewater-surveillance network established during the Covid-19 pandemic helped officials at the New York State Department of Health’s Wadsworth Center track polio’s spread in several counties.

New York is now expanding wastewater monitoring and starting to look for flu, RSV, hepatitis A, norovirus and antibiotic-resistant genes in parts of the state, as health officials across the U.S. consider wastewater as a more permanent public-health tool for watching a variety of threats.

“Are we on the brink of another outbreak, if it’s rising? Is it just sort of holding steady?” asked Dr. St. George, Wadsworth’s director of virology. “These are all important public health questions.”   

Dr. Kirsten St. George of the Wadsworth Center is looking for clues in the state’s sewage.
An analysis conducted at the Wadsworth Center indicates the presence of the hepatitis A virus.

Dr. Kirsten St. George of the Wadsworth Center, which is starting to track the spread of pathogens including the hepatitis A virus.

For decades, researchers around the world used wastewater primarily to track poliovirus, which spreads through contact with an infected person’s feces. At the onset of the pandemic, scientists found that the Covid-19 virus’s genetic material could be detected in sewage. That meant sewage might help track other respiratory viruses, too.

Researchers built surveillance networks around the country to track Covid-19 and monitor for variants. 

Now they are starting to leverage that system to search for other pathogens they had wanted to track through the sewers for years including norovirus and antibiotic-resistant microbes, said Amy Kirby, program lead of wastewater surveillance at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

“Once you have this system, it’s much easier to activate it for a new pathogen,” Dr. Kirby said.

Sewage samples from treatment plants are sent to labs, where genetic material that can come from hundreds of thousands of people is isolated. Researchers usually test samples for pathogens with the PCR technology used in a Covid-19 lab test administered at the doctor’s office.  

Health officials use the data to track changing concentrations of a virus, which can help them monitor the spread of pathogens including flu and RSV for which many people might not be tested. The technique has yielded early evidence of Covid-19 outbreaks and helped officials tailor public messaging and decide where to open testing sites.

Biobot Analytics Inc., which works with the CDC to monitor Covid-19 and the renamed mpox, started tracking opioids in wastewater before the pandemic. It has collected data on substances including fentanyl in more than 100 counties across 47 states. Officials in Cary, N.C., used that data to encourage people to dispose of drugs properly and to distribute more overdose-reversal drugs, Biobot said.

Not everything can be tracked through sewage, and there isn’t a standard national system for collecting data and comparing readings from site to site. Privacy can be a concern in smaller communities or when tracking illicit substances, researchers said, though wastewater data is processed as an anonymous group sample. And some communities that collect wastewater data aren’t using it to guide public-health policy, researchers said. 

The wastewater treatment plant in Schenectady, N.Y., is participating in the study of sewage.
Workers at the Schenectady treatment plant collect samples and ship them for analysis.
Analysis of the wastewater samples is conducted at the Wadsworth Center in Albany, N.Y.

The wastewater treatment plant in Schenectady, N.Y., where workers collect samples and ship them for analysis at the Wadsworth Center in Albany, N.Y.

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine said in a report Thursday that the U.S. should invest more in the CDC’s wastewater-surveillance network and expand its reach. The report recommended that the CDC should have an open process for picking which pathogens to track and establish an ethics committee, among other steps.  

“We’re at a critical juncture where it has gone from being a grass-roots effort to a more nationally recognized tool,” said Megan Diamond, head of the Rockefeller Foundation’s wastewater-surveillance program, who wasn’t involved with the report.

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After a polio case was confirmed in New York in July, health officials reviewed stored wastewater samples and found poliovirus in wastewater from several counties, including as far back as spring. Health officials urged people who weren’t vaccinated against polio to get the shots and alerted doctors.

The CDC extended poliovirus wastewater testing to a handful of counties with low vaccination rates or potential connections to New York’s polio case.

“What you might expect a virus to do when it starts circulating is exactly what we saw in the wastewater,” said Dan Lang, deputy director of New York’s Center for Environmental Health and head of the state’s wastewater-monitoring program.

No samples tested positive for poliovirus by the end of November, but it was detected again in Orange County last month. Health officials are planning to analyze past samples from additional counties for traces of the virus before deciding whether to widen poliovirus wastewater monitoring when the weather warms and the virus can spread more readily. 

“We’re worried about a big sort of roaring back,” said Dr. Eli Rosenberg, a lead epidemiologist who coordinates New York’s polio response. “We’re using this time now to prepare.”

Poliovirus was found in Orange County, N.Y., last month.

Write to Brianna Abbott at brianna.abbott@wsj.com

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Hopes of Covid-19 Reprieve Fade as BA.5 Subvariant Takes Over

Covid-19 is circulating widely as the BA.5 Omicron subvariant elevates the risk of reinfections and rising case counts, spoiling chances for a summer reprieve from the pandemic across much of the U.S.

Covid-19 levels are high in a fifth of U.S. counties, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s metric based on case and hospital data, a share that has been mostly rising since mid-April. BA.5 is estimated to represent nearly two in three recent U.S. cases that are averaging just more than 100,000 a day, CDC data show. The true number of infections may be roughly six times as high, some virus experts said, in part because so many people are using at-home tests that state health departments largely don’t track.

“We think we’re in a very high level of community transmission, second only to the Omicron peak from the wintertime,” said

Jeffrey Duchin,

health officer for the public-health agency covering Seattle and King County, Wash.

Biden Administration health officials said Tuesday that BA.5 has the potential to push the number of infections higher in the coming weeks. They urged eligible people to get vaccine booster shots to lower the risk of hospitalization and death, and not to wait for potential updated boosters targeting Omicron subvariants.

Getting a booster now “does not preclude your also doing it in the fall,” said

Anthony Fauci,

director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, during a White House briefing. “If the risk is now, address the current risk.”

Nationally, wastewater data tracking the prevalence of the Covid-19 virus through July 6 has recently trended up, according to Biobot Analytics. Such data can provide clues about the pandemic’s trajectory.

Covid-19 hospital admissions are going up in Los Angeles County, and local authorities have said they might impose a mask mandate.



Photo:

caroline brehman/Shutterstock

New York City last week urged people to resume masking in public, indoor settings and around crowds outside. Los Angeles County’s public health department said rising Covid-19 hospital admissions mean that the county also could soon reach high community prevalence and that officials would reinstate a mask mandate if the county stayed at that level for two weeks.

Signs of acute illness remain muted, continuing a hallmark of the spring surge, as treatments plus immunity from vaccines and previous infections reduce risks for many people. But the high prevalence of infection in many areas continues to cause disruptions, including canceled flights and spoiled travel plans, sick children sidelined from camp and child care and hospital employees who can’t report to work.

BA.5’s mutations make it particularly adept at causing repeat infections, even in people who had the version of Omicron that caused the largest recorded spike in cases last winter. There is no evidence to suggest BA.5 causes more severe disease, CDC Director

Rochelle Walensky

said.

Ashish Jha,

the White House’s Covid-19 response coordinator, noted some mixed signals from overseas. Portugal, where vaccine and booster coverage is robust, experienced a sizable wave of serious illness and death after BA.5 hit there recently, Dr. Jha said over the weekend. South Africa, on the other hand, recorded a low rate of deaths after BA.5 surged there this spring, he said.

The BA.5 Omicron subvariant surged in South Africa in the spring, and the death rate was low.



Photo:

Denis Farrell/Associated Press

In addition to vaccines, health officials urged people to use treatment medications such as

Pfizer Inc.’s

Paxlovid. They encouraged people to test before gatherings and use high-quality masks in crowded, indoor spaces.

The pace of hospital admissions for Covid-19-positive patients has recently sped up, federal data indicate. The seven-day moving average for confirmed Covid-19 patients in hospitals has topped 33,000, federal data show, up from a low near 10,000 in April but far below January’s record peak topping 150,000.

Many of the hospitalizations are cases where patients test positive after being admitted for other reasons. Data indicate the portion of Covid-19 patients who need intensive care remains low. Deaths are hovering around 300 to 350 a day, Dr. Jha said Tuesday. This is much closer to historic lows than highs, though he called the current level unacceptable.

Couples whose weddings were cancelled or diminished because of Covid-19 participated in a symbolic ceremony Sunday in New York City, one sign that many people are less shy about crowds at this point in the pandemic.



Photo:

Julia Nikhinson/Associated Press

The reduced threat is one reason a pandemic-fatigued populace is less likely to change behavior when cases are high, said

Robert Wachter,

chairman of the department of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. Crowds are once again common, from concerts to restaurants to airport terminals. Mask use is scattered, while mandates remain rare.

“Part of what motivated people to be super careful for a long time was the fear that I’m going to die of this thing,” Dr. Wachter said. “I think people have less fear of that, and that’s not inappropriate.”

He and other health experts said they continue to take precautions in their own lives because of the risk of developing long Covid symptoms after an infection. Persistently high levels of infections in communities can also leave elderly people and those with compromised immune systems more exposed, according to epidemiologists. Tamping down on the spread of the virus also gives it less chance to mutate, Dr. Fauci said.

As a surge that started in early spring grinds along through the summer, some health officials are thinking about the fall. U.S. health authorities are planning a fall booster campaign to protect against a potential winter surge, and vaccine makers are racing to update their vaccines to target Omicron subvariants, including BA.5.

Public-health officials and experts hope modified shots will help get some booster-hesitant people off the fence. “With a good public-health campaign behind the rollout of the vaccine, we can shift the scales of that trajectory of people getting both their boosters and vaccinated,” said

Debra Furr-Holden,

dean of New York University School of Global Public Health.

Dr. Duchin, in Seattle, said he hoped communities would head toward the fall at a low level of Covid-19 transmission to ease pressure on health systems. He said he was worried about the consequences if instead Covid-19 is circulating widely at what is traditionally a more intense time for respiratory illnesses generally.

“This virus is relentless in the way it’s challenging us in unexpected ways,” he said.

Write to Jon Kamp at jon.kamp@wsj.com and Jared S. Hopkins at jared.hopkins@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications
The BA.5 subvariant is estimated to represent nearly two in three recent U.S. Covid-19 cases. An earlier version of this article misstated the portion as more than one in three cases. (Corrected on July 12)

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Clues to Covid-19’s Next Moves Come From Sewers

BOSTON—At a sewage treatment plant on a sliver of land in Boston Harbor, trickles of wastewater are pumped into a plastic jug every 15 minutes. Samples from the jugs, analyzed at a lab in nearby Cambridge, Mass., are part of the growing effort to monitor the Covid-19 virus in wastewater across the U.S.

On Deer Island in Boston, readings from the system covering 2.4 million people have recently shown virus readings leveling off after a steep decline from this winter’s Omicron-driven rise. In some areas, levels of the virus may be edging higher.

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“The last few days have been a little worrisome,”

Larry Madoff,

medical director of the bureau of infectious disease and laboratory sciences at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, said late last week. “It certainly bears careful watching.”

Wastewater sampling here and at hundreds of sites nationwide is once more drawing closer scrutiny from epidemiologists worried the spread of what appears to be a yet-more-contagious version of Omicron, known as BA.2, and rising cases in Europe could soon spoil the latest U.S. recovery. The number of wastewater sites indicating virus increases on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dashboard has risen in recent weeks, though the majority of sites still show declining levels.

In Boston and beyond, these systems during the Omicron wave helped quickly detect virus-concentration surges, declines and circulating variants, often before testing and case data. Health authorities believe it will become an increasingly important early-warning tool that can help guide public messaging and other responses, like marshaling resources to surging areas.

Massachusetts public health official Larry Madoff says, ‘The last few days have been a little worrisome.’

A view through the grates at the Deer Island treatment facility in Boston.

But the technique is also suffering some growing pains from a mix of technological, data-interpretation and logistical challenges as U.S. authorities try to build out a national system.

“We’re trying to figure out how you can take that data and turn it into public-health action and how that can be incorporated into a surveillance system,” said

Kelly Wroblewski,

director of infectious-disease programs at the Association of Public Health Laboratories. “It hasn’t quite matured yet.”

Researchers determined early in the pandemic they could track the new coronavirus through the sewers. The low-cost technique has speed and coverage benefits: People can shed virus in their waste before they feel sick enough to get tested. Many never get tests that generate results that can be tallied by public-health officials, especially now that people are self-testing more at home. States have also started closing testing sites and dialing back daily data reporting, making a passive data source like the sewers increasingly important.

“We are really relying more and more on wastewater as testing goes down,” said

Loren Hopkins,

chief environmental science officer with the Houston Health Department, which detected Omicron’s presence via wastewater before it confirmed a case in the city.

Wastewater samples can show an increase in Covid-19 virus levels before it shows up in the case data.

The CDC established a wastewater surveillance network in late 2020 and added wastewater data to its public Covid-19 dashboard in February. The system currently includes data from more than 700 sampling sites that cover roughly one-quarter of the U.S. population. The agency has a contract with a testing company to provide twice-weekly testing to more sites and is aiming to expand its network into all 50 states within the next few years.

Still, some places aren’t well-suited to wastewater monitoring. Roughly one in five households, concentrated in rural areas, use septic systems that don’t feed into sewers or wastewater treatment plants, federal officials estimate.

“We will have a challenge bringing wastewater surveillance to all communities, particularly those that are very rural,” said

Amy Kirby,

team lead on the National Wastewater Surveillance System at the CDC. “But we are hopeful that we can continue to get as many communities on board as possible.”

The CDC’s network has hit some challenges in its expansion. The well-established testing program on Boston’s Deer Island is working through some data-collection hurdles before it can submit numbers to the CDC, said

Steve Rhode,

a laboratory director for the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority.

Lab technicians analyze wastewater samples in Cambridge, Mass.



Photo:

ALLISON DINNER/REUTERS

Sewage samples from Boston and neighboring towns helped preview the Omicron surge.

Some states and facilities aren’t participating. The Wyoming Department of Health stopped its wastewater monitoring system in December after funding for the program ended. There hasn’t been a firm decision on future wastewater monitoring, a department spokeswoman said.

North Dakota monitors wastewater, but some lawmakers and citizens were opposed to reporting the data federally. The state declined to participate in the federal program, the state’s health department said.

Other states are aiming to build bigger programs. Louisiana has sampling sites in the New Orleans area transmitting data to the CDC. The state wants to build up to 100 sites including cities and places like prisons and nursing homes, said

Theresa Sokol,

Louisiana’s state epidemiologist.

What is an endemic and how will we know when Covid-19 becomes one? WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez breaks down how public-health experts assess when a virus like Covid-19 enters an endemic stage. Photo: Michael Nagle/Zuma Press

Comparing data from different sites can be difficult, water and public-health experts say. Facilities across the country often collect samples at different frequencies or use different analytical approaches. Local factors such as rainfall, the mix of industrial and residential developments and population surges in tourist areas can also affect readings. Some researchers have found workarounds, including measuring substances like other viruses consistently found in humans to normalize the data.

At low levels of virus, data gathered from wastewater can also be noisy, and the CDC’s current wastewater dashboard can show some confusing readings. It lists percent changes in virus concentrations at individual sites over 15-day periods, but not the virus levels themselves or the trends over time. This can lead to what look like huge increases—some recently topped 2 billion percent—likely in instances where there are changes from low virus levels, agency scientists say. The CDC is working on new ways to standardize and display its data, they say.

In Massachusetts, wastewater data are part of a broader picture health authorities are using to gauge trends, said Dr. Madoff of the state’s health department. But the sewage samples proved their particular value by previewing the Omicron surge and decline.

“It was clearly the first signal,” he said.

The Deer Island wastewater treatment plant is near the suburban community of Winthrop, Mass.

Write to Brianna Abbott at brianna.abbott@wsj.com and Jon Kamp at jon.kamp@wsj.com

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Ventilation, Vaccination Key to Suppressing Covid-19 as People Head Back Indoors

Forget temperature checks and deep-cleaning surfaces. The best way to protect people from Covid-19 as they return to offices and other indoor spaces is to bolster air quality and vaccination coverage, experts on the transmission of the virus say.

Their consensus reflects an evolving understanding of the spread of a virus that the World Health Organization declared the cause of a pandemic two years ago this Friday. Deep-cleaning surfaces and temperature checks—still a mainstay at many businesses—have been understood for many months to be of relatively little help stopping the virus from spreading. Rather, as businesses and communities across the U.S. begin what is shaping up to be the broadest return yet to pre-pandemic behaviors, transmission and infectious-disease experts said broad vaccine coverage and good air hygiene stand out as the most important mitigation efforts.

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At COP26, World Governments Agree to Strengthen Emissions Pledges, Formulate Carbon-Trading Market

GLASGOW—More than 190 nations reached a deal at the United Nations summit here that aims to accelerate greenhouse-gas-emissions cuts across the world, but leaves big questions over how governments will follow through in the coming decade to try to avert the worst effects of global warming.

Supporters say the deal—struck Saturday evening after two weeks of negotiations—signals new determination among the world’s governments to shift away from burning fossil fuels, the main source of greenhouse gases that scientists say are causing the earth to warm. The agreement, though, features weaknesses that have hamstrung U.N. climate talks over the decades.

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Action on Climate Change Is Urged by Medical Journals in Unprecedented Plea

Editors of 220 leading medical, nursing and public-health journals from around the world called for urgent action on climate change, in a joint editorial published on Sunday.

The editorial, which appeared in journals including the New England Journal of Medicine, the British Medical Journal and The Lancet, warns that current efforts aren’t enough to address health problems resulting from rising global temperatures caused by emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

“Health is already being harmed by global temperature increases and the destruction of the natural world,” the journals’ editors say in the editorial. If unchecked, they say, rising temperatures “risk catastrophic harm to health that will be impossible to reverse.”

In their shared statement, the editors press for “fundamental changes in how our societies and economies are organized and how we live” to limit future global temperature increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels—a goal arising from the 2015 Paris climate summit.

Greenhouse-gas emissions from human activity have raised global temperatures by 1.1 degrees C since the Industrial Revolution began in the mid-19th century, according to scientific studies.

The editorial is aimed at world leaders participating in a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly that begins on Sept. 14, as well as those who will be gathering in November at a global climate treaty conference in Glasgow, Scotland. The latter gathering, known as COP26, is expected to address more ambitious efforts to cut greenhouse-gas emissions.

Global temperature increases have led to higher rates of heart and lung ailments, infectious disease, premature death and injuries, according to the CDC; drought conditions at Lake Oroville in Oroville, Calif., last month.



Photo:

Ethan Swope/Associated Press

The editorial was published in journals from China, India, Australia, Africa and South America in addition to those from the U.S. and the U.K. The effort was organized by the U.K. Health Alliance on Climate Change, a coalition of 21 health organizations including the British Medical Association, the Royal Society of Medicine and the Royal College of Nursing.

“It is an unusual happening and it is driven by unusual circumstances,” Dr. Eric J. Rubin, editor in chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, said of the editorial. “It is evident that climate change is a problem. What is less evident to people is that it is a public-health problem, not just a physical catastrophe.”

Rising temperature and other manifestations of climate change have brought higher rates of heart and lung ailments and infectious diseases, as well as of injuries and premature deaths tied to extreme weather, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2015, for example, extreme heat was blamed for the deaths of nearly 3,300 people in France, according to the Brussels-based Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters.

Climate change also takes a toll on mental health. Heat waves, floods and other extreme weather events—which research shows have become more common as a result of climate change—can cause anxiety and depression, according to the American Psychiatric Association. A 2019 study published in Nature Climate Change linked increased temperatures to a rise in suicides.

The editorial warns that the health impacts of climate change disproportionately affect children, elderly people and those with underlying medical conditions as well as ethnic minorities—which vary from country to country. These and certain other communities—including pregnant women, immigrants, indigenous people, disabled people and workers exposed to extreme weather—are especially vulnerable to climate change, according to the American Public Health Association.

The editorial comes on the heels of a report issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in August, which said record heat waves, extreme  droughts, more intense storms, melting ice sheets and rising seas were attributable in large part to heat-trapping gases such as methane released by agriculture and carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels.

The report, which was based on a three-year analysis of 14,000 peer-reviewed scientific studies and improved climate models, indicates that without rapid reductions in emissions, global temperatures could rise 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels over the next 20 years. Climate models have proven to be quite accurate at predicting global temperature changes, according to a 2019 study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Many governments and businesses have set targets to reach net-zero emissions, some as soon as 2030. But the editorial calls such targets “easy to set and hard to achieve. Concern is growing that temperature rises above 1.5 degrees C are beginning to be seen as inevitable, or even acceptable, to powerful members of the global community.” 

Among other measures, the editorial calls for wealthy countries to go beyond an existing commitment to provide $100 billion a year in aid to help low-income countries adapt to rising temperatures. More funding is needed for mitigation and adaptation, the editorial says, and it should come as grants rather than loans and should be aimed at helping to redesign transport systems, food distribution networks, financial markets and healthcare systems.

“Health professionals have been on the front-line of the Covid-19 crisis,“ Dr. Fiona Godlee, editor in chief of the British Medical Journal, said. “And they are united in warning that going above 1.5 C and allowing the continued destruction of nature will bring the next, far deadlier crisis.”

Write to Robert Lee Hotz at sciencejournal@wsj.com

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