Wastewater surveillance is a powerful epidemiological tool that “mirrors our life,” and has gained wide attention in recent years due to its application during the COVID-19 pandemic. The hosts this week, Drs. Navaneeth Narayanan and Emily McDonald, are joined by two wastewater surveillance experts, Dr. Nasreen Hassoun-Kheir of Geneva University Hospitals, a WHO Collaborating Centre on antimicrobial resistance (AMR), as well as Professor David Graham of Newcastle University, United Kingdom, to discuss how this surveillance method—as well as a multidisciplinary approach—are central to understanding community health, infection control and pandemic preparedness.
Chapters
- (00:00) - Introduction
- (03:03) - Icebreaker question
- (08:33) - What is wastewater surveillance (WWS)?
- (12:47) - How does WWS relate to infection surveillance?
- (16:57) - WWS & pandemic preparedness
- (21:09) - Is the data accessible to the public?
- (25:10) - WWS uses in healthcare settings & mass health: what it can and cannot answer
- (43:00) - What's next for WWS: experts' picks
- (48:33) - Take-home messages