Environmental Surveillance

Why in News: ICMR has announced wastewater surveillance for 10 viruses across 50 cities to strengthen early-warning systems for disease outbreaks.

Introduction

  • Environmental surveillance: tracking pathogens (bacteria, viruses, parasites) through sewage, wastewater, soil, and other environmental samples.
  • Provides early warning signals of disease outbreaks, complementing clinical surveillance.

How It Works

  • Sources of samples: sewage treatment plants, hospital effluents, public spaces (railway stations, airplanes).
  • Pathogens shed in stool/urine of infected individuals → detected in samples.
  • Detection methods:
    • Rigorous sampling protocols.
    • Pathogen load comparisons.
    • Whole-genome sequencing to identify variants.
  • Diseases monitored: viruses (measles, cholera, polio, COVID-19), parasitic worms (roundworms, hookworms).

Significance

  • Beyond clinical case detection: captures asymptomatic and untested cases.
  • Early-warning advantage: pathogen load in wastewater can precede clinical spikes by over a week.
  • Public health planning: allows timely interventions, vaccination drives, and outbreak preparedness.
  • Longstanding use: >40 years globally; in India, first for polio in Mumbai (2001), later expanded during COVID-19.

India’s Initiatives

  • ICMR initiative: wastewater surveillance for 10 viruses across 50 cities.
  • Ongoing programs for COVID-19 and avian influenza.

Challenges: fragmented data sharing, lack of standardized frameworks, project-based rather than integrated approach.

Way Forward

  • Develop a national wastewater surveillance system.
  • Ensure inter-institutional coordination and standardized protocols.
  • Integrate with routine disease surveillance programs.
  • Explore emerging tools: AI-based analysis, audio surveillance of coughing in public spaces.

Conclusion

Environmental surveillance is a cost-effective, non-intrusive, and scalable tool. It is crucial for epidemic preparedness, pandemic response, and resilient public health systems in India.

GS Paper III (Science & Technology, Environment)

  • Application of biotechnology and AI in disease surveillance.

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