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Impact of sampling depth on pathogen detection in pit latrines
by
Holm, Rochelle H.
, Chigwechokha, Petros
, Brown, Joe
, Tilley, Elizabeth
, de los Reyes, Francis L.
, Capone, Drew
, Risk, Benjamin B.
in
Animals
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Centrifuges
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Depth
/ Detection
/ Disposal sites
/ DNA, Bacterial
/ DNA, Helminth
/ DNA, Protozoan
/ DNA, Viral
/ Earth Sciences
/ Epidemiologic methods
/ Epidemiology
/ Feces
/ Greywater
/ Health aspects
/ Health surveillance
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Identification and classification
/ Inspection
/ Latrines
/ Malawi
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Methods
/ Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction - methods
/ Onsite
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Physical Sciences
/ Public health
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Samples
/ Sampling
/ Sanitary microbiology
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation facilities
/ Sewage - microbiology
/ Sewage - parasitology
/ Sewer systems
/ Sludge
/ Social Sciences
/ Specimen Handling - methods
/ Tankers
/ Toilet Facilities
/ Toilets
/ Tropical diseases
/ Trucks
/ Tubes
/ Urban Population
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste disposal sites
/ Waste water
/ Wastewater
2021
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Impact of sampling depth on pathogen detection in pit latrines
by
Holm, Rochelle H.
, Chigwechokha, Petros
, Brown, Joe
, Tilley, Elizabeth
, de los Reyes, Francis L.
, Capone, Drew
, Risk, Benjamin B.
in
Animals
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Centrifuges
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Depth
/ Detection
/ Disposal sites
/ DNA, Bacterial
/ DNA, Helminth
/ DNA, Protozoan
/ DNA, Viral
/ Earth Sciences
/ Epidemiologic methods
/ Epidemiology
/ Feces
/ Greywater
/ Health aspects
/ Health surveillance
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Identification and classification
/ Inspection
/ Latrines
/ Malawi
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Methods
/ Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction - methods
/ Onsite
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Physical Sciences
/ Public health
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Samples
/ Sampling
/ Sanitary microbiology
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation facilities
/ Sewage - microbiology
/ Sewage - parasitology
/ Sewer systems
/ Sludge
/ Social Sciences
/ Specimen Handling - methods
/ Tankers
/ Toilet Facilities
/ Toilets
/ Tropical diseases
/ Trucks
/ Tubes
/ Urban Population
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste disposal sites
/ Waste water
/ Wastewater
2021
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Impact of sampling depth on pathogen detection in pit latrines
by
Holm, Rochelle H.
, Chigwechokha, Petros
, Brown, Joe
, Tilley, Elizabeth
, de los Reyes, Francis L.
, Capone, Drew
, Risk, Benjamin B.
in
Animals
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Centrifuges
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Depth
/ Detection
/ Disposal sites
/ DNA, Bacterial
/ DNA, Helminth
/ DNA, Protozoan
/ DNA, Viral
/ Earth Sciences
/ Epidemiologic methods
/ Epidemiology
/ Feces
/ Greywater
/ Health aspects
/ Health surveillance
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Identification and classification
/ Inspection
/ Latrines
/ Malawi
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Methods
/ Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction - methods
/ Onsite
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Physical Sciences
/ Public health
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Samples
/ Sampling
/ Sanitary microbiology
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation facilities
/ Sewage - microbiology
/ Sewage - parasitology
/ Sewer systems
/ Sludge
/ Social Sciences
/ Specimen Handling - methods
/ Tankers
/ Toilet Facilities
/ Toilets
/ Tropical diseases
/ Trucks
/ Tubes
/ Urban Population
/ Waste disposal
/ Waste disposal sites
/ Waste water
/ Wastewater
2021
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Impact of sampling depth on pathogen detection in pit latrines
Journal Article
Impact of sampling depth on pathogen detection in pit latrines
2021
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Overview
Wastewater based epidemiology (WBE) is increasingly used to provide decision makers with actionable data about community health. WBE efforts to date have primarily focused on sewer-transported wastewater in high-income countries, but at least 1.8 billion people in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) use onsite sanitation systems such as pit latrines and septic tanks. Like wastewater, fecal sludges from such systems offer similar advantages in community pathogen monitoring and other epidemiological applications. To evaluate the distribution of enteric pathogens inside pit latrines–which could inform sampling methods for WBE in LMIC settings unserved by sewers–we collected fecal sludges from the surface, mid-point, and maximum-depth of 33 pit latrines in urban and peri-urban Malawi and analyzed the 99 samples for 20 common enteric pathogens via multiplex quantitative reverse transcription PCR. Using logistic regression adjusted for household population, latrine sharing, the presence of a concrete floor or slab, water source, and anal cleansing materials, we found no significant difference in the odds of detecting the 20 pathogens from the mid-point (adjusted odds ratio, aOR = 1.1; 95% confidence interval = 0.73, 1.6) and surface samples (aOR = 0.80, 95% CI = 0.54, 1.2) compared with those samples taken from the maximum depth. Our results suggest that, for the purposes of routine pathogen monitoring, pit latrine sampling depth does not strongly influence the odds of detecting enteric pathogens by molecular methods. A single sample from the pit latrines’ surface, or a composite of surface samples, may be preferred as the most recent material contributed to the pit and may be easiest to collect.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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