The Precision Health Platform tracks COVID-19 through waste-water surveillance, with Bengaluru as the first city-wide initiative
In a first to deal with the rising number of COVID-19 cases across India, the Government of Karnataka is introducing a city-wide sewage surveillance system in Bengaluru that will help officials track the virus at an early stage, even among asymptomatic individuals.
The project is being assisted by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Skoll Foundation-supported COVIDActionCollab (CAC), an India-wide collaborative of over 300 organisations and networks working together to provide COVID-19 relief and recovery services to the country’s most vulnerable communities.
Over the last year, scientists around the world have discovered that waste-water testing can serve as a cost-effective early warning system, often predicting an increase in COVID-19 before the number of official cases has risen. The Precision Health Platform in Bengaluru, the first of its kind in Asia, will test sewage from both sewered and non-sewered waste-water to identify clusters of new infections. Early identification of clusters can help guide the COVID-19 response and give policymakers the information they need to better allocate limited pandemic resources.
CAC supports the Government of Karnataka by providing training for sanitation workers and lab technicians on collecting and transporting sewage samples to labs for testing, and analysing and safely disposing of them. The technical expert group will provide programmatic inputs and insights to policymakers for targetted COVID-19 prevention, care and management services based on the analysis.
The Government of Karnataka plans to begin testing across 45 wards in the city.
Rakesh Singh, Additional Chief Secretary, Urban Development, said, “The system will cover over 75 per cent of Bengaluru’s nine million population by generating over 90 data points per week signalling the emerging COVID-19 clusters or signalling a COVID-19 cluster’s exit from an area. We are happy to be the first in India to launch this platform.”
Although sewage testing is not a replacement for clinical testing and citizens are advised to continue following safety guidelines, this surveillance system is a cost-effective tool that can be used not only for COVID-19, but in the future, it can also track other pathogens with pandemic potential and measure anti-microbial resistance in the population.
Dr Angela Chaudhuri, Health Lead, COVIDActionCollab, said, “While there have been many experiments and studies on finding traces of the COVID-19 virus in sewage, Bengaluru will be joining the Netherlands, Finland and Israel in path-breaking surveillance system like this with experts from all over the world supporting the initiative.”
Adding to it, Sangita Patel, Director, USAID/India Health Office, said, “Since the beginning of the pandemic, the United States and India have worked closely together to provide life-saving treatments, disseminate public health messages to local communities; strengthen case-finding and surveillance; and support innovative solutions to bolster emergency response and preparedness. USAID is proud to support the COVIDActionCollab and these efforts to identify early clusters of the virus for better pandemic preparedness and management. We hope success in Karnataka will lead to the expansion of similar systems in other locations across India.
Further, according to Lucien Chan, Managing Director, the Skoll Foundation, “The Precision Public Health surveillance approach developed by the COVIDActionCollab will greatly support governments in monitoring the spread of the virus and allow them to take preventive measures rather than reacting after the crisis has occurred. The programme holds immense potential, and I look forward to seeing other governments consider this approach in their respective states.”