UWM is a partner in a new CDC national center for wastewater surveillance
MILWAUKEE_The Wisconsin Wastewater Surveillance Program was named a National Center of Excellence for Wastewater Surveillance by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Wisconsin Wastewater Surveillance Program (WWSP) is a partnership between the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene at UW-Madison, and UW-Milwaukee.
The WWSP was a pioneer during the COVID-19 pandemic in developing and applying wastewater-based surveillance for the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Using techniques they spent months fine-tuning, the researchers, including UWM’s Sandra McLellan, devised methods of extracting genetic traces of the disease from sewage samples.
McLellan, a professor at the School of Freshwater Sciences, said the Wisconsin group devised a standard method of detecting SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater where none existed before.
Wastewater surveillance captures the presence and amounts of pathogens shed by people, both with and without symptoms. Measuring the pathogen levels in untreated wastewater at a treatment facility over time provides a cost-efficient way of determining if infections are increasing or decreasing in the community served by the treatment facility.
As a Center of Excellence, the WWSP will serve as subject matter experts to provide training, consultation services and resources to public health agencies and affiliated laboratories in both starting surveillance programs and advancing existing monitoring programs.
“Critical in the effort has been our partners at the wastewater agencies,” McLellan said. “Both the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewage District and NEW Water, the brand of the Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District, were early partners, helping us to establish our surveillance program. And they will be providing expertise to our new center.”
The WWSP will provide critical support to the National Wastewater Surveillance System in evaluating and validating new wastewater-based methods for other infectious diseases and drug-resistant organisms.
Currently, the WWSP monitors wastewater from nearly 50 treatment facilities for SARS-CoV-2 levels and a subset of facilities for influenza viruses and RSV.
McLellan is leading a project to create a replicable model for launching wastewater surveillance systems so that more cities can use this method of managing public health crises.
SARS-CoV-2 wastewater surveillance data can be found on the DHS website, and genetic sequencing data is available on the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene’s wastewater genomic dashboard.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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