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Three years of wastewater testing rounded up in Helena

The CDC's National Wastewater Surveillance System is a growing program that monitors the prevalence of disease in communities.
COVID-19 Testing Data Helena
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HELENA — The U.S. Centers for Disease Control's (CDC) National Wastewater Surveillance System is a growing program that monitors the prevalence of disease in communities, now the Lewis and Clark Public Health is a part of that database.

“It takes a village to really provide this resource to our community, " Lewis and Clark Public Health Epidemiologist Dorota Carpenedo told MTN News.

The Lewis and Clark County Public Health Department just hit year three of its own wastewater monitoring program.

Carpenedo said the program is seen as a complementary tool to other methods of testing disease prevalence by looking at peaks and valleys in the wastewater data to see what may be coming down the pipeline for health officials.

“We use this more as a projector," she explained.

On a weekly basis samples are pulled from Helena and East Helena wastewater treatment plants and then tested at Carroll College.

The data collected provides information on community-level disease trends whether or not people have symptoms.

“We are part of the, I guess I would say, a movement to use other data sources that may be non-conventional," Carpenedo said, "we can't be caught off guard like we have in the past when the pandemic happened. We need to be prepared."

Across the country an estimated 117 million people are covered by the national wastewater program — that’s about 35% of the U.S.

On the CDC's websiteyou can explore this data and see where viral activity is the highest — Montana is currently experiencing very high COVID-19 activity.

“Around winter time we are in respiratory season right now and so we expected for it to go up," Carpenedo said.

Right now, the national system is mainly tracking Mpox as well as COVID-19, but there is an opportunity for the program to grow.

Carpenedo told MTN News RSV, influenza, and even opioid prevalence could be expanded into wastewater testing in the future.

The results of wastewater testing are not used to identify or diagnose infected individuals, therefore wastewater concentrations are not used to calculate COVID-19 rates in the community at this time.