Minister Davis Announces Unique Program to Detect COVID-19 in Wastewater

  • Environment and Climate Change
  • Health and Community Services

June 4, 2021

Today, the Honourable Bernard Davis, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, announced an initiative that will help detect COVID-19 in wastewater in Newfoundland and Labrador.

A wastewater surveillance program was initiated in partnership with the Department of Health and Community Services and the City of St. John’s during the outbreak in the Northeast Avalon region in February. Samples were collected at the Riverhead Wastewater Treatment Facility, which treats wastewater for approximately 130,000 people in St. John’s, Mount Pearl and Paradise. To date, 24 wastewater samples have been collected, with only two out of 24 testing positive for COVID-19 during the peak infection timeframe in February. All samples analyzed since February have tested negative for COVID-19. As part of collaborative work in this emerging area of research, these samples are currently analyzed by the Public Health Agency of Canada’s National Microbiology laboratory in Winnipeg at no cost to the Provincial Government.

Wastewater surveillance for COVID-19 allows for the detection of the virus in a large population. An infected person not only sheds the virus when they breathe out, but it also appears in their feces. Through genomic testing, the virus can be detected in a wastewater sample. Testing can provide an early warning of positive and asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 in the community, and it can assist in public health guidance.

A Wastewater Surveillance Working Group will explore expansion of the program. The expansion will look at the collection of samples from other communities in the province; examine the testing as a tool for mass public health surveillance for other diseases; and, explore opportunities to collaborate with other partners.

Quotes
“As we continue through the pandemic, the wastewater surveillance program is an early detection tool that can help detect COVID-19 in wastewater, and alert officials about the presence and potential transmission of COVID-19 in a community. I am pleased to see the progress and results from this innovative program. We are also very pleased that our officials along with officials from the Department of Health and Community Services are participating on a number of national forums in this area.”
Honourable Bernard Davis
Minister of Environment and Climate Change

“Currently across Canada, research is happening to determine the potential benefit of wastewater surveillance in the context of COVID-19. This partnership aligns with the research happening across the country and will serve us well as we continue to learn more about the presence of COVID-19 in this province. Possible expansion of the program will help inform our public health team’s work on COVID-19 and help us detect early signs of COVID-19 in our communities, allowing us to move quicker and catch the virus before it spreads.”
Honourable John Haggie
Minister of Health and Community Services 

“Having a healthy city and population is important to the City of St. John’s. We are pleased to support the Department of Health and Community Services and the Department of Environment and Climate Change in gathering important data throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to best address and protect the health of our citizens.”
Danny Breen
Mayor, City of St. John’s

-30-

Learn More

Follow us on Twitter @GovNL, @ECCM_GovNL and @HCS_GovNL

Like us on Facebook

Media contacts
Lynn Robinson
Environment and Climate Change
709-729-5449; 691-9466
lynnrobinson@gov.nl.ca

Lesley Clarke
Health and Community Services
709-729-6989, 699-2910
lesleyclarke@gov.nl.ca

Kelly Maguire
City of St. John’s
709-576-8491
kmaguire@stjohns.ca

2021 06 04 11:40 am