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Polio detected in NYC’s sewage, suggesting virus circulating

NEW YORK (AP) — The virus that causes polio has been found in New York City’s wastewater in another sign that the disease, which hadn’t been seen in the U.S. in a decade, is quietly spreading among unvaccinated people, health officials said Friday.

The presence of the poliovirus in the city’s wastewater suggests likely local circulation of the virus, health authorities from the city, New York state and the federal government said.

The authorities urged parents to get their children vaccinated against the potentially deadly disease.

“The risk to New Yorkers is real but the defense is so simple — get vaccinated against polio,” New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Ashwin Vasan said. “With polio circulating in our communities there is simply nothing more essential than vaccinating our children to protect them from this virus, and if you’re an unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated adult, please choose now to get the vaccine. Polio is entirely preventable and its reappearance should be a call to action for all of us.”

Dr. José R. Romero, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said, “This is sobering; we know polio spreads silently, and it’s likely that there are many people infected with polio and shedding the virus in these communities. This is also an urgent and living reminder of the importance of vaccination.”

New York City is being forced to confront polio as city health officials are struggling to vaccinate vulnerable populations against monkeypox and adjusting to changing COVID-19 guidelines.

“We are dealing with a trifecta,” Mayor Eric Adams said Friday on CNN. “COVID is still very much here. Polio, we have identified polio in our sewage, and we’re still dealing with the monkeypox crisis. But the team is there. And we’re coordinating and we’re addressing the threats as they come before us, and we’re prepared to deal with them with the assistance of Washington, D.C.”

The announcement about the discovery of the polio virus in New York City comes shortly after British health authorities reported finding evidence the virus has spread in London but found no cases in people. Children ages 1-9 in London were made eligible for booster doses of a polio vaccine Wednesday.

In New York, one person suffered paralysis weeks ago because of a polio infection in Rockland County, north of the city. Wastewater samples collected in June in both Rockland and adjacent Orange County were found to contain the virus.

CDC officials said the virus identified in wastewater samples collected in New York City did not contain enough genetic material to determine if they were linked to the Rockland County patient.

Most people infected with polio have no symptoms but can still give the virus to others for days or weeks. Vaccination offers strong protection, and authorities urged people who haven’t gotten the shots to seek one immediately.

Based on past outbreaks, it is possible that hundreds of people in the state have gotten polio and don’t know it, officials said.

Polio was once one of the nation’s most feared diseases, with annual outbreaks causing thousands of cases of paralysis. The disease mostly affects children.

Vaccines became available starting in 1955, and a national vaccination campaign cut the annual number of U.S. cases to less than 100 in the 1960s and fewer than 10 in the 1970s, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A small percentage of people who contract polio suffer paralysis. The disease is fatal for 5-10% of those paralyzed.

All schoolchildren in New York are required to have a polio vaccine, but Rockland and Orange counties are both known as centers of vaccine resistance.

According to the CDC’s most recent childhood vaccination data, about 93% of 2-year-olds had received at least three doses of polio vaccine. But the rate is only 80% in New York state, and is far lower in the area around where the polio case was reported — just 60% in Rockland County and 59% in Orange County, according to state data.

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Polio virus found in New York City wastewater

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Health authorities announced Friday that polio virus has been found in New York City wastewater, a discovery that extends the known presence of the virus from the region’s northern suburbs to the nation’s largest city.

City and state health departments offered no details of where in New York City the virus was discovered, but said there were six positive samples collected in June and July. They said the finding suggests “likely local circulation of the virus.”

“Polio can lead to paralysis and even death,” the city said in a tweet. Officials are urging unvaccinated New Yorkers to immediately seek the shots that protect against the virus.

“The risk to New Yorkers is real but the defense is so simple — get vaccinated against polio,” city Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan said in a news release. “With polio circulating in our communities, there is simply nothing more essential than vaccinating our children to protect them from this virus, and if you’re an unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated adult, please choose now to get the vaccine. Polio is entirely preventable and its reappearance should be a call to action for all of us.”

Before Friday’s announcement, the virus had been found in wastewater in the northern New York City suburbs of Rockland and Orange counties. Only one person, an unvaccinated 20-year-old man from Rockland County, was known to be infected. The man sought treatment in a New York City hospital in June, officials said last month, and is having difficulty walking. Officials said no other cases have been identified. Officials said the New York City wastewater samples have not been genetically linked to the Rockland County case.

His infection, the first in the United States in nearly a decade, and the presence of the virus in wastewater in the suburban counties indicated wider local transmission, the New York State Health Department said last week. Officials urged anyone not immunized against polio, especially people in the greater New York metropolitan area, to be vaccinated.

The U.S. population is highly vaccinated, but anyone unsure whether he or she received the series of shots in childhood should seek advice from a medical provider. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has sent a team to Rockland County to help with the investigation. Three doses of the polio vaccine provide at least 99 percent protection, according to the CDC.

“Based on earlier polio outbreaks, New Yorkers should know that for every one case of paralytic polio observed, there may be hundreds of other people infected,” State Health Commissioner Mary T. Bassett said in last week’s statement. “Coupled with the latest wastewater findings, the department is treating the single case of polio as just the tip of the iceberg of much greater potential spread.”

Along with covid-19 and monkeypox, the polio case gives the United States three worrisome viral diseases that were nonexistent here a little more than two years ago.

Highly contagious, polio was a fearsome, sometimes fatal scourge before a vaccine was developed in 1955. It causes permanent paralysis in people who are not fully vaccinated in about 5 of every 1,000 cases.

Most of the U.S. population is protected against the disease through vaccinations in childhood. But in areas with low vaccination coverage, such as the Orthodox Jewish community in Rockland County, unvaccinated people are at high risk. There is no treatment for polio.

In New York City, Friday’s news release said, 86.2% of children between the ages of 6 months and 5 years old have received three doses of polio vaccine. “Of particular concern,” it added, are neighborhoods where child vaccination coverage is less than 70 percent.

Genetic sequencing for the Rockland County case, performed by New York state’s public health laboratory and confirmed by the CDC, showed a type of polio virus that indicates transmission from someone who received the oral polio vaccine, according to a July health alert. The oral vaccine, which is not administered in the United States, uses weakened virus to stimulate immune system protection against infection.

In rare cases, an unvaccinated person can become infected that way, with the virus eventually returning to full strength, known as neurovirulence, according Irina Gelman, Orange County’s commissioner of health.

In her county, also home to a large Orthodox Jewish population, just 58.7 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, significantly less than the New York State total of about 80 percent, according to Friday’s news release. Rockland County has a 60.3 percent vaccination rate, officials said.

The last naturally occurring cases of polio in the United States were recorded in 1979.

On Wednesday, the Rockland County outbreak was causing little outward sign of concern. At four community health centers in Spring Valley, Monsey and Pomona, there were no signs urging unvaccinated residents to get free shots, despite a county vaccination rate of about 60 percent.

Most clinics were quiet and empty, though the sidewalks in Orthodox Jewish enclaves of Spring Valley and Monsey were crowded with mothers pushing strollers. If they were concerned, they kept it to themselves, with one woman after another saying that she had “no opinion about it.”

Esther Miller, however, said she felt secure in the continued health of her five children, who are all vaccinated against polio and other childhood diseases.

“It’s up to parents to keep their kids healthy,” said the 35-year old Spring Valley resident, an Orthodox Jew. “Giving vaccines is what you can do to protect them. My mother got all of her kids vaccinated. She was right on top of it. I do the same.”

Local officials said vaccine misinformation has contributed to low compliance. The polio vaccination rate among children in the county, which has the largest Orthodox population in the country, is just 42 percent, and nearly 30 percent of Rockland County’s overall population is under the age of 18.

Officials in London announced Wednesday that they are offering polio booster vaccines to children ages 1 to 9 after traces of polio virus were found in the British capital’s wastewater in June. The U.K. Health Security Agency said Wednesday that the vaccination program will start in areas where traces of the virus have been detected and immunization rates are low.

The June discovery prompted the United Kingdom to declare a rare “national incident.” No cases have been reported. The United Kingdom was declared polio-free by the World Health Organization in 2003.

Adela Suliman and Rachel Pannett contributed reporting from London

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Polio Has Been Detected in New York City Wastewater, Officials Say

The polio virus has been detected in wastewater from New York City, suggesting the virus is likely circulating in the city, New York’s health authorities said Friday.

The announcement came after a man in Rockland County, N.Y., north of the city, was stricken with polio that left him with paralysis. Health officials fear that the detection of polio in New York City’s wastewater could be followed by other cases of paralytic polio. The vaccination rate across the city fell slightly during the pandemic, as children’s pediatrician visits were postponed.

But most adults were vaccinated against polio as children. Across New York State, nearly 80 percent of people have been vaccinated. The spread of the virus poses a risk to unvaccinated people, but the polio vaccine is nearly 100 percent effective in people who have been fully immunized.

Three doses of the vaccine provides at least 99 percent protection, but in some ZIP codes fewer than two-thirds of children 5 years and younger have received that, worrying health officials.

Though many people infected with polio have no symptoms, about 4 percent will get viral meningitis and about one in 200 will become paralyzed, the health authorities say. Health authorities urged parents of children who were not yet fully vaccinated to bring them to their pediatricians.

“The risk to New Yorkers is real but the defense is so simple — get vaccinated against polio,” said Dr. Ashwin Vasan, the New York City health commissioner. “With polio circulating in our communities there is simply nothing more essential than vaccinating our children to protect them from this virus, and if you’re an unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated adult, please choose now to get the vaccine.”

“Polio is entirely preventable and its reappearance should be a call to action for all of us,” he added.

Polio had already been detected in wastewater samples taken north of New York City. But Friday’s announcement was the first indication it had been detected in New York City.

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Wastewater samples outside New York City suggest community spread

Polio virus particle, computer illustration.

Kateryna Kon | Science Photo Library | Getty Images

Polio has been found in wastewater samples taken from two counties outside of New York City indicating the virus is spreading in the community, according to state health officials.

Wastewater samples taken from two different locations in Orange County during June and July tested positive for the virus, according to the New York State Department of Health.

The findings come after an unvaccinated adult in Rockland County contracted polio, suffered paralysis and had to be hospitalized last month. Polio was subsequently found in Rockland County wastewater samples. Rockland County neighbors Orange County.

“These environmental findings — which further indicate potential community spread — in addition to the paralytic polio case identified among a Rockland County resident, underscore the urgency of every New York adult and child getting immunized against polio, especially those in the greater New York metropolitan area,” New York health officials said.

The polio strain the adult in Rockland County caught suggests the chain of transmission did not begin in the United States. The strain the individual contracted is used in the oral polio vaccine, which contains a mild version of the virus that can still replicate. This means people who receive the oral vaccine can spread the virus to others.

But the U.S. hasn’t used the oral polio vaccine in more than 20 years. The U.S. uses an inactivated polio vaccine that is administered as shot in the leg or arm. The vaccine uses a non-replicating virus strain, which means people who receive the shot cannot infect other people.

The polio case in New York is genetically linked to the Rockland County wastewater sample as well as samples from the greater Jerusalem area in Israel and London in the United Kingdom. Health authorities in the U.K. declared a national incident in June after they detected polio in London sewage samples.

“New Yorkers should know that this does not imply that the individual case identified in Rockland County, New York has travel history to Israel or the UK,” the New York state health department said.

No polio cases have originated in the U.S. since 1979 and the nation has been considered polio free since then, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Polio caused widespread fear in the 1940s before vaccines were available. The virus disabled more than 35,000 people every year during that time, according to the CDC.

But a successful vaccination campaign in the 1950s and 1960s dramatically reduced the number of infections. Polio cases are still reported in the U.S., but they are linked to travelers who bring the virus into the country. The case in Rockland County is the first time the U.S. has confirmed an infection since 2013. New York state last confirmed an infection in 1990.

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Polio found in New York wastewater as state urges vaccinations

WASHINGTON, Aug 1 (Reuters) – The polio virus was present in wastewater in a New York City suburb a month before health officials there announced a confirmed case of the disease last month, state health officials said on Monday, urging residents to be sure they have been vaccinated.

The discovery of the disease from wastewater samples collected in June means the virus was present in the community before the Rockland County adult’s diagnosis was made public July 21. read more

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in an emailed statement that the presence of the virus in wastewater indicates there may be more people in the community shedding the virus in their stool.

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However, the CDC added there have been no new cases identified, and that it is not yet clear whether the virus is actively spreading in New York or elsewhere in the United States.

Laboratory tests also confirmed the strain in the case is genetically linked to one found in Israel, although that did not mean the patient had traveled to Israel, officials added. The CDC said genetic sequencing also tied it to samples of the highly contagious and life-threatening virus in the United Kingdom.

The patient had started exhibiting symptoms in June, when local officials asked doctors to be on the lookout for cases, according to the New York Times.

“Given how quickly polio can spread, now is the time for every adult, parent, and guardian to get themselves and their children vaccinated as soon as possible,” State Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett said.

There is no cure for polio, which can cause irreversible paralysis in some cases, but it can be prevented by a vaccine made available in 1955.

New York officials have said they are opening vaccine clinics to help unvaccinated residents get their shots. Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) is the only polio vaccine that has been given in the United States since 2000, according to the CDC. It is given by shot in the leg or arm, depending on the patient’s age.

Polio is often asymptomatic and people can transmit the virus even when they do not appear sick. But it can produce mild, flu-like symptoms that can take as long as 30 days to appear, officials said.

It can strike at any age but the majority of those affected are children aged three and younger.

Representatives for the New York health department could not be immediately reached for more details on the wastewater findings.

The polio vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk in the 1950s was heralded as a scientific achievement to tackle the global scourge, now largely eradicated nationwide. The United States has not seen a polio case generated in the country since 1979, although cases from a traveler and an oral vaccine were found in 1993 and 2013.

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Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Aurora Ellis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Bay Area wastewater surveys suggest COVID surge could be biggest yet

Surveys of coronavirus levels in Bay Area wastewater suggest that the region’s relentless spring COVID surge probably rivals the winter omicron wave in terms of the number of people currently infected — in fact, this surge may be the largest yet in some places. But capturing the scale of disease, and conveying to the public the relative risk of getting sick, is becoming increasingly tricky, health experts say.

The huge winter surge peaked in the Bay Area at more than 20,000 reported COVID cases a day in mid-January. Currently, the region is recording far fewer cases — roughly 3,500 a day as of this week — but experts believe the actual number of infections may be anywhere from 2 to 10 times higher, as so many more people use home tests, the results of which are not reported to county or state public health authorities.

In all previous surges, the level of coronavirus detected in wastewater closely matched case counts when plotted on a curve. In the omicron winter, for example, both wastewater virus levels and reported case counts started to spike sharply in mid-December, peaked over a period of a few days, then quickly plummeted.

This spring surge broke that pattern — for the first time, case counts and viral levels have diverged. Over the past two months in particular, viral levels in the wastewater shot up again, while reported cases have climbed at a much slower pace.

The two metrics and their disparate portraits of what’s happening in the Bay Area underscore the challenges of tracking COVID as the region lurches through its third year of the pandemic, health experts say. People must take into account an array of data points — from wastewater surveillance and case counts to hospitalizations and even anecdotal reports among friends — to understand their personal risk of becoming infected and decide what precautions to take.

“Wastewater surveillance says there’s lots more disease out there than what we see in the case counts,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an infectious disease expert at UCSF. “People should be interpreting this as there is risk out there, and if they enter crowded indoor settings or even very crowded outdoor settings — I’m thinking of the Stern Grove (Festival) — they need to be careful. Pick and choose what you want to do. Use your mask.”

Studying the amount of virus found in wastewater began early in the pandemic in some places, and has become an increasingly widespread surveillance tool across the United States over the past two years. It’s still not a perfect measure of how much the disease is spreading in a community, and scientists have not yet worked out a formula for consistently translating wastewater viral levels to community infection rates.

But as other metrics — and especially reported cases — become less reliable, wastewater surveillance is winning over many experts as a relatively stable, unbiased marker of COVID transmission.

“This surge really highlights the utility of wastewater,” said Alexandria Boehm, a wastewater surveillance expert at Stanford who has led surveys of sewage around the Bay Area. “If you look at the data, the current surge is the same order of magnitude as the first omicron surge in December and January.”

Scientists develop the wastewater metric by studying the concentration of viral RNA in sewage. Boehm’s team at Stanford, for example, analyzes wastewater samples from about a dozen locations in and around the Bay Area for several key mutations, including two that are found in all coronavirus variants currently circulating.

Wastewater surveillance is considered more reliable than other means of tracking COVID, in part because there’s no human interference — some amount of virus is excreted when a person is infected, and everyone’s poop ends up in the sewage. Tracking the virus in wastewater isn’t dependent on people deciding to get tested, or where they do it.

Other metrics, like COVID hospitalizations and the rate of tests coming out positive, can also be used to gauge the size of a surge, but they also have shortcomings. Hospitalizations lag behind cases by as much as a week or two, so aren’t great for understanding what is happening in the moment. And they paint an incomplete picture of how many infections are actually in the community, especially now that so many fewer COVID patients end up in the hospital thanks to vaccines. The positive test rate is somewhat more reliable, but it too can be influenced by human bias — people are more likely to get tested if they have symptoms, for starters, or if they already have a positive result on a home test.

Currently, both hospitalizations and the positive test rate show the Bay Area in the midst of a significant surge, though not quite as large as the winter wave.

Whether this surge has surpassed the omicron wave in terms of daily infections remains unclear. Rutherford guessed cases now were about 60% of the omicron peak, “but that may just be me putting on my happy face,” he said. Health officials in Santa Clara and Alameda counties said they don’t think this wave has quite hit omicron levels — but they added that they too can’t know that for sure.

“The wastewater tells us that we’re still steady at really high levels of COVID transmission — very similar to where we were in January earlier this year,” said Michael Balliet, deputy director of Santa Clara County Public Health. “I don’t think we’re quite at that same level, but we’re certainly pretty close.

“It’s important for people to continue to practice all of the strategies — testing, wearing face coverings, getting vaccinated and boosted if you haven’t already — to reduce their risk,” he said.

Dr. Nicholas Moss, the health officer for Alameda County, said he uses multiple metrics to get a sense of what’s happening in his community, but he appreciates that many people don’t have the time or interest to pay such close attention. That’s becoming increasingly true as the pandemic drags on and people have other priorities in their lives to distract them from COVID. With that in mind, he said simply relying on social networks to keep tabs on the virus may be the best way for many people to assess their own risk.

“Honestly, I find in some ways the easiest way for people to get a sense of how much COVID is around is just: Are you hearing about lots of people getting COVID? That’s a good sign that for you there’s a lot of COVID around, that there is a risk and you should be careful,” Moss said. “It’s very unscientific, but people really relate to it. If the person across the street has COVID and my aunt has COVID and we heard about a cluster of cases at the local day care — that kind of signal, people should pay attention to it.”

Erin Allday is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: eallday@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @erinallday



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Twin Cities wastewater shows steady COVID-19 increase

The coronavirus load in Twin Cities wastewater more than doubled over the past week, indicating a rising spread of COVID-19 in Minnesota.

The increase reported Friday by the Metropolitan Council was influenced by a one-day blip on April 17 that revealed the highest viral load in wastewater since the end of the severe omicron COVID-19 wave in January. However, the viral load in samples from the St. Paul treatment plant increased last week even without that outlier, and the trend matches increases in confirmed COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations as well.

The Minnesota Department of Health on Friday reported another 1,464 coronavirus infections, excluding infections identified by at-home antigen tests that aren’t publicly reported. The seven-day average of new infections was 398 per day on April 1, but it increased to 827 on Tuesday. COVID-19 hospitalizations in Minnesota rose from 183 on April 10 to 234 on Thursday.

The rising totals remain far below pandemic peaks — with new cases exceeding 13,000 per day in mid-January and hospitalizations reaching 1,629 on Jan. 14. Health officials also are hopeful that an increase in infections won’t cause a comparable surge in hospitalizations and deaths.

Only 24 of the COVID-19 hospitalizations on Thursday involved people placed in intensive care because of breathing problems or other complications. That 10% ICU usage rate is the lowest in the pandemic, indicating that the current virus might be milder, treatments are improving, or that recent infections and vaccinations have left many Minnesotans with immunity protection against severe illness.

A review of blood drawn for various medical tests in January found that more than 48% showed the presence of coronavirus antibodies indicating infections. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consequently estimated that nearly 2.7 million Minnesotans already had been infected by then — compared with the 1.4 million that have been identified by reportable COVID-19 tests.

Minnesota’s COVID-19 death toll is 12,492, including 10 deaths reported on Friday.

Health officials are concerned immunity levels from recent infections and vaccinations could be waning and people could become more vulnerable to COVID-19 again. While Minnesota is ahead of national averages on COVID-19 vaccinations, the state estimates only 49% of residents 5 and older are up to date with their shots. Up to date means they either recently received their initial doses or received scheduled first boosters to maintain immunity.

The abundance of treatment options also has resulted in a test-to-treat approach in which doctors and prescribers can directly order antiviral pills or monoclonal antibody infusions when patients test positive.

The state this week reported about 14,000 available courses of Paxlovid, an antiviral pill that is most effective when taken shortly after infection. Some monoclonal antibodies have been phased out because they don’t work against circulating strains of the virus, but the state has about 3,500 courses of bebtelovimab, which remains effective.

COVID-19 activity in Minnesota is being fueled by a fast-spreading BA.2 coronavirus subvariant, which recently caused pandemic waves in several European nations. Wastewater sampling showed that BA.2 was responsible for more than 90% of the viral load in the Twin Cities over the past week.

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Why feds are pointing out limitations to wastewater tests for COVID-19

A new report from a congressional watchdog agency says more needs to be done to standardize the monitoring of COVID-19 and other diseases through wastewater surveillance, now a key way for Utahns to track the spread of the virus.

“Wastewater surveillance may have enormous potential as a public health tool, but some aspects of the science may need further development,” according to the “Science and Tech Spotlight: Wastewater Surveillance” report released earlier this week by the Government Accountability Office.

Testing sewage samples for pathogens, including viruses, drugs and toxic chemicals, can serve as an early warning system to alert authorities of the increased spread of disease, illegal drug use or other public health issues, the report stated.

As an example, the report pointed out low levels of COVID-19 can be detected in human waste “before symptoms appear, as early as one to two weeks before an infected person may seek clinical testing” as well as in those who never experience symptoms, “who make up about 70 percent of cases and may not seek clinical testing.”

But there are also challenges, the report added, such as privacy concerns over the access to genetic information, issues with animal feces and other potential contaminants, as well as dilution from rainwater washing down storm drains, costs, and particularly, no uniform methods for sample collections, analysis and data sharing.

That lack of standardization “complicates efforts to aggregate, interpret, and compare data across sites and develop large-scale public health interventions,” the report said, noting that some scientists see a benefit to making testing for COVID-19 in wastewater the same nationwide.

Under Utah Gov. Spencer Cox’s new “steady state” plan to treat COVID-19 more like the flu or other deadly diseases with limited outbreaks, the state is focused on wastewater surveillance, along with emergency room visits, to monitor the spread of the virus rather than case counts as fewer reported tests are being done.

Karen Howard, the GAO’s director of science and technology assessment, told the Deseret News that how the public may interpret the wastewater surveillance data was not taken into account in writing the report, “partly” because of its technical nature.

“We thought of it mainly in terms of how public health authorities would use the data that they were gathering rather than how the public might do that,” Howard said, adding wastewater surveillance is “a useful technique that has its purposes but it also has limitations.”

And the better the public understands the limitations outlined in the report, “the better they can take whatever actions they might want to take based on the results of that sort of communitywide view of pathogen level,” she said.

What’s not clear is how the public should evaluate the data, which in Utah includes a map showing whether the virus has increased, decreased or stayed the same at the sites where testing is being conducted as well as a separate chart indicating risk levels ranging from “elevated” to “watch” to “low” to “below reporting limit” to “insufficient data.”

“I think it’s difficult to know how the public should interpret it. I’m not sure the public authorities fully have a handle on how they should interpret it, either,” Howard said. “They’re watching levels of the pathogen go up or go down. They’re judging that from the status of the virus, or of a surge in a community.”

At this point, the data is probably most useful to indicate how the spread of COVID-19 is trending “rather than a number interpretation method,” she said, but just when the detection of more virus indicates a community may be headed for an outbreak — and what actions the public should then be taking — are not clear, either.

“I don’t think we have a lot of experience with that yet as a nation,” Howard said. She said the goal of the report, which is sent to members of Congress and other policymakers, is to focus attention on the need for standardization in wastewater surveillance.

“Once you do standardize, then the next question becomes how do we use the data we’re collecting to make policy decisions,” she said. “And again, I don’t think as a public health community, there’s a good handle on that yet, on what these numbers should be telling us and what we should be doing.”

Utah was one of the first states to look for the virus in sewage, starting a pilot project shortly after the pandemic began more than two years ago and now collecting samples twice a week from sites representing some 88% of the state’s population, said Nathan LaCross, the Utah Department of Health’s wastewater surveillance manager.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tracks wastewater surveillance data from more than 750 sites, although few have current data and are scattered over just over a dozen states. The data is not used by the CDC to calculate COVID-19 risks by county to determine when masks or other precautions are recommended.

LaCross has said a new wastewater surveillance website is in the works to better showcase the trends identified through what he called a “statistical process,” acknowledging there’s “not a super-scientific method” to measuring how alarming those trends actually are.

Maddi Crezee gets a sample of raw sewage at the Salt Lake City Water Reclamation Facility in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, April 6, 2022. The water at the facility is tested for COVID-19 twice a week.

Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

Han Kim, a professor of public health at Westminster College, has described the state’s current reporting on the results of analyzing what Utahns flush down the toilet as frustrating, especially for lay people. Even as an epidemiologist, Kim said it’s hard for him to know from the data available when there’s a true rise in cases.

But Dr. Brandon Webb, an Intermountain Healthcare infectious diseases physician, expressed more confidence in Utah’s wastewater surveillance, calling it helpful. He also said it’s just one of the tools that’s needed to track the virus.

The doctor said the map marking fluctuations in COVID-19 levels at the wastewater treatment sites where samples are collected is the type of information that is especially useful to the public because it’s “visibly easy to recognize in terms of geography where we’re starting to see hot spots.”

But even combined with the “more granular data” that’s more useful to epidemiologists and other professionals, like how many millions of gene copies per person per day are being found, Webb said wastewater surveillance is not the only way to keep an eye on COVID-19.

“We still are watching other measures,” he said, including test results, hospitalizations and deaths.

That’s the same data that had been reported daily by the Utah Department of Health throughout the pandemic. As of April 1, when the governor’s new pandemic response took effect, the state health department is updating its public dashboard, coronavirus.utah.gov, just once a week.

While that means most Utahns only see new data on Thursdays, Webb said it’s important to recognize that public health officials and other policymakers still have access to the information that’s being collected about the virus on a daily basis.

“Even though the public reporting has scaled back in terms of frequency of updates, I still have a high degree of confidence that our department of health colleagues and our epidemiologists in the department of health are paying close attention to all available epidemiological surveillance data,” he said.

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Wastewater surveillance could solve public health problems beyond Covid-19

The first signs of the most recent Covid-19 waves have often been detected in our sewers instead of nasal swabs.

But in the future, the potential for human waste to tell us about what is happening with our community’s health could extend far beyond the novel coronavirus.

“This has been its coming-out party. We’ve realized the power in this pandemic,” John Dennehy, a biologist at the City University of New York who has been assisting with NYC’s wastewater surveillance program, told me. “Now there’s great interest in developing an infrastructure to sustain this capability beyond the pandemic.”

Sewage surveillance is becoming more valuable right now as conventional testing is becoming less transparent. More people have been using rapid at-home tests and might not report results to a public health agency. That means the number of positive cases being reported by official sources might not actually provide a full picture of what’s happening with the pandemic.

But no matter how or if they’re testing, infected people — whether they have symptoms or not — flush out the virus when they go to the bathroom, leaving viral RNA that can be detected in wastewater samples. It requires careful collection and testing, but sewage can provide a less biased look at the viral trends in a given community.

Science has not yet reached the point where we can say that X amount of viral load in a community’s sewage means Y number of people are infected in that community. But still, knowing which way viral loads are trending is useful. If they are going up, even before the number of positive tests starts increasing, it could in theory allow public health authorities and the local health system to start preparing for a surge. If they are going down, public health officials (and the general public) can be confident that any waning in official case numbers is real and not the byproduct of, say, less testing.

So far, health authorities have not been using wastewater levels to trigger a public health response — ordering people to mask up again once viral loads hit a certain level, for example. But experts say a more direct link between sewage surveillance and public health policies might be established in some places in the coming year.

Covid-19 has shown the value of public health sewage surveillance

The pandemic has revealed the potential for wastewater surveillance — and the shortcomings in the current US infrastructure.

Dennehy told me that his team in NYC had noticed an unusual iteration of the virus back in November, but it wasn’t until South Africa announced the presence of the omicron variant in people there a month later that they realized they had been seeing the mutations that would soon start a new wave of infections worldwide.

South Africa has been commended for its genomic surveillance system, which is what allowed it to be the first to identify omicron as a threat, even though, as the New York example shows, the variant was likely already present in other parts of the world. The US, on the other hand, lagged behind other countries for much of the pandemic in that work, and integrating sewage into that surveillance system remains a work in progress.

Before the pandemic, using wastewater for disease surveillance was not unheard of, but it was generally limited to monitoring for diseases like polio, where the appearance of any amount of virus would be cause for alarm.

Covid-19 has shown that wastewater can provide an even more nuanced and varied picture of a community’s health. Since researchers showed the ability to detect the coronavirus in sewage in early 2020, wastewater surveillance has spread across the globe. More than 470 sites in the US and nearly 3,400 sites worldwide are reporting the amount of virus they are detecting in the waste we flush.

Wastewater has its limitations, including challenges with proper collection and adjusting for the concentration of human waste in the sewage. Some rural areas don’t have a community wastewater system, relying instead on individual homes’ septic tanks, which makes broad monitoring impossible. Across Montana, Wyoming, North and South Dakota, and Nebraska, only two wastewater sites are reporting their coronavirus levels to the CDC.

Setting up a strong wastewater monitoring program also requires political support and coordination between public health departments, environmental agencies, and local water authorities, which may not be accustomed to working together.

In spite of those obstacles, sewage monitoring has become more integrated into the global pandemic response over time. And experts don’t expect it to stop there. They are already imagining how else we might use all the information that can be gleaned from our waste to get ahead of future outbreaks and target public health interventions.

“Most people believe wastewater testing is not going away,” Marc Johnson, a University of Missouri virologist who has helped lead that state’s wastewater monitoring program, told me. “It’s too nice of a tool. It can give us an unbiased readout of a community’s health, without having to worry about individual patient confidentiality.”

All the ways wastewater surveillance could help us improve public health

For the foreseeable future, sewage surveillance could help the country keep ahead of Covid-19. Not only can the general trends — an increasing or decreasing amount of virus being found — give a warning about emerging or fading waves, but wastewater can also provide scientists clues about new variants that may soon appear.

After wastewater is collected and taken to a laboratory, scientists run the same kind of test that is conducted for an individual diagnostic PCR test. Beyond identifying whether or not the virus is present, the lab can also determine how much of it there is depending on how many testing cycles they need to run to detect it. (Fewer cycles means more virus.)

Then scientists can also take the sample and analyze the genetic make-up of the virus found therein. If it’s different from the most common variant at the time, that may be a signal that another variant is lurking out there with the potential to take over. Johnson said that, in Missouri, his team has seen Covid-19 variants that have not been detected in humans yet. They may have found their way into the wastewater system from animals, he told me, and we know that animal-to-human transmission is one way for new variants to emerge.

US scientists are also starting to use wastewater in more targeted ways to combat Covid-19. Dennehy said an NYC hospital had asked his team if they could start analyzing the sewage coming out of their facility specifically so they could get an early warning if the virus was appearing more frequently in their patients and staff. Continuous diagnostic testing would be expensive to maintain, and this population-level surveillance would allow the hospital to institute more rigorous testing only when the viral load in the wastewater suggests that it’s necessary.

That kind of creative approach can be applied to other public health problems as well.

Johnson described a similar proposal in Missouri prisons that want to monitor for tuberculosis outbreaks. They have asked for their sewage to be regularly tested for TB, which they could use to determine when to conduct individual diagnostic tests, which are both costly and logistically cumbersome.

“They don’t have to waste money on testing when they know there is nothing there,” he said.

Surveillance programs could watch for other pathogens, too, such as influenza, hepatitis, and norovirus for early warnings of emerging outbreaks. Julianne Nassif, an expert on wastewater surveillance with the Association of Public Health Labs, said we could also monitor for bacteria, viruses, and other microbes that are resistant to current treatments. Public health officials could try to get ahead of an outbreak of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in a nursing home, for example, with the information gleaned from downstream sewage.

Johnson envisioned communities monitoring for narcotics, to better tailor their public health campaigns. Wastewater could be tested to determine whether cocaine or opioid use is rising in a given sewage shed. It could even determine what kind of opioids are being used, which could be helpful to health departments. Widespread heroin use might require a different intervention than diverted prescription opioids or black-market fentanyl.

The possibilities sound almost endless, extending to research that could help us better understand human health. Dennehy described to me one hypothetical experiment that could be run with sewage monitoring, looking for the viral markers associated with colon cancer. By comparing the results from one community with, say, a nearby nuclear power plant and another community somewhere else, we could get a better understanding of how the surrounding environment affects people’s health.

But for all of this potential to be realized, these efforts would require sustained support. The CDC bet on the wastewater boom, launching a national Covid-19 surveillance system in the fall of 2020. But dedicated investments in infrastructure and a workforce would be necessary if the country were to begin conducting wastewater surveillance on a more permanent basis.

In general, the US has not appeared willing to make big investments in public health. Scientists working on these programs hope that the same may not be true of wastewater surveillance, given the opportunities it presents.

“We learned a lot of hard-won lessons with the Covid pandemic. We got caught with our pants down at the beginning. A lot of things that we did were too late,” Dennehy told me. “The hope is we can remember these lessons for the next time this comes around, which may not be that long.”

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Why more COVID-19 in Salt Lake County wastewater isn’t worrying officials

COVID-19 risk levels in the areas served by both the South Valley and Jordan Basin water reclamation facilities have moved up enough to make the state’s watch list, but a Salt Lake County Health Department official said that doesn’t mean another virus surge is coming.

“I don’t think we have a reason to think that transmission is going to explode like it did in January,” Kylie Sage, the county health department’s data and surveillance manager said, citing still low rates of emergency room visits for the virus and the availability of more vaccinations and treatments.

“People have more options for protection and so those three indicators together don’t necessarily spark immediate concern,” Sage said, even though the county, like the state, is now relying on a measure of the presence of COVID-19 in feces samples collected at sewage treatment plants to monitor outbreaks rather than case counts.

“Wastewater tells us what we might be able to expect, but it’s just one tool in the surveillance toolbox. And because of that, we shouldn’t necessarily react to every fluctuation in the data. We know that COVID is still spreading in our communities,” Sage said, so some ups and downs are likely.

COVID-19 cases are climbing in other parts of the country as so-called “stealth omicron” sweeps through the United States. According to theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, the even more highly transmissible subvariant of omicron, which drove Utah’s case counts to record highs in January, now dominates this region.

But Salt Lake County’s wastewater surveillance levels are comparable to the same point last year, Sage said. Since then, children have become eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations and booster doses have become available, including a second booster dose for those 50 and older or who are immunocompromised.

Utah has just moved to a new “steady state” pandemic response announced earlier this yearby Gov. Spencer Cox. The governor said by March 31, the state would end most testing and treatment and begin dealing with COVID-19 more like the flu or other endemic disease that, while still deadly, isn’t a constant threat.

Under the new response, the Utah Department of Health has replaced daily reports on COVID-19 with a single update posted online Thursdays at coronavirus.utah.gov that includes data from the state’s twice-weekly analysis of wastewater samples gathered from 32 sites around the state.

While Thursday’s update showed increases in the virus at just six sites, a map on another state website, wastewatervirus.utah.gov, on Friday showed nine sites have higher levels of COVID-19 but still puts the South Valley facility in the unchanged category.

Sage said both South Valley and Jordan Basin don’t just have more COVID-19 being detected, but she said it’s enough that the state has now deemed them sites to watch. The state defines the level as “of potential concern, but not high enough to be considered elevated.”

Nathan LaCross, the state health department wastewater surveillance manager, said after the state’s weekly update came out Thursday, new data has moved sites in Moab and Park City to the highest risk level, elevated, and four sites — the two in Salt Lake County, one in Davis County and another in Hyrum — to the watch list.

He said even though the Moab and Park City systems have been determined to have elevated levels of COVID-19, no one there should be “incredibly alarmed, but they should be aware that there are strong indications we’re seeing more transmission in some areas and take appropriate measures,” such as social distancing.

There’s no such red flag in Salt Lake County yet, but Sage offered similar suggestions.

“My advice would be to stay diligent in the really simple ways that you can protect yourself — washing your hands, staying home if you’re sick, getting vaccinated if you’re not, or boosted if you’re eligible,” she said. “Really, just abiding by those hygiene practices we’ve all become so familiar with in the past two years.”

Most people don’t need to wear masks or social distance, Sage said, unless they are at high risk for severe illness from COVID-19 or regularly interact with someone who is. The COVID-19 vaccine still offers the best protection against hospitalization or death, said.

And COVID-19 isn’t the only virus on the upswing in Salt Lake County — so is the flu, Sage said.

“It’s still low but it is unusual that at this point in the year, flu activity is going up. Normally spring is the end of our flu season,” she said. Flu had all but disappeared during the first winter of the pandemic, but now many people are more relaxed about the hygiene habits they adopted against COVID-19.

“I think that’s the most likely cause” of the increase in the flu, she said, urging those who have not done so to get a flu shot. “More or less, everybody’s gone back to their quote-unquote normal lives and as we see more people and do more things, that just gives us more potential to spread different viruses.”

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