Wastewater testing can alert public health officials to measles infections days to months before cases are confirmed by doctors, researchers said in two studies published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Colorado health officials were able to get ahead of the highly contagious virus by tracking its presence in sewer systems, researchers wrote. And Oregon researchers found wastewater could have warned them of an outbreak more than two months before the first person tested positive.
The findings add to evidence that wastewater testing is a valuable weapon in tracking disease, including COVID-19, polio, mpox and bird flu.
But the national wastewater surveillance system, run by CDC since 2020, is newly at risk, under a Trump administration budget plan would slash its funding from about $125 million a year to about $25 million.
Peggy Honein, director of the CDC's division of infectious disease readiness and innovation, said the proposed funding level would ''sustain some of the most critical activities'' but ''it would likely require some prioritization.''
The national system covers more than 1,300 wastewater treatment sites serving 147 million people. It includes six ''centers for excellence'' — Colorado among them — that innovate and support other states in expanding their testing.
States brace for cuts
The funding cut is still a proposal, and Congress has started pushing back against cuts to health care in general.