After a series of short-lived efforts by state and county agencies, Hawaii is finally primed to launch its own program to test sewage for coronavirus this summer 鈥 nearly two and a half years into the pandemic.

As scientists and policy makers struggled to control this once-in-a-century pandemic, wastewater testing emerged in 2020 as a promising tool for keeping track of the virus, boasting the ability to predict Covid-19 surges in communities days before symptoms emerge and nasal swabs start coming back positive.

Seeing this potential, the Hawaii Department of Health had hoped to bring its wastewater testing laboratory online sooner, but health officials say shortages in equipment and qualified staff, delays in federal funding and the unique challenge of working with partners an ocean away led to the years-long wait.

鈥淪ure, it would have been nice to start testing wastewater earlier,鈥 said state laboratories director Edward Desmond. 鈥淲e had the money to buy the collection devices, we made our plans and wrote our operating procedures, and we tried to order the equipment and the manufacturers couldn鈥檛 keep up with the demand.鈥

An aerial view of the Sand Island wastewater treatment plant. After years of development, the state is nearly ready to start testing wastewater for coronavirus. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2018

After many months, the DOH has finally assembled the necessary equipment and is in the process of hiring lab personnel, he said.

But even as Hawaii sunsets the last of its major pandemic restrictions, health officials and researchers say it鈥檚 not too late for wastewater testing to make a difference in the fight against Covid and other diseases.

鈥淲e can detect the presence of new variants if they occur 鈥 we鈥檙e going to be able to look for antibiotic resistant bacteria,鈥 Desmond said. 鈥淪o, I have been frustrated by the slow pace at which this developed, but by no means do I think it’s useless going into the future.鈥

People , the virus that causes the Covid-19 disease, in their feces when infected. By testing samples from treatment plants of aggregate wastewater, scientists can essentially monitor the level of Covid circulating in a community at any given time.

And because the shedding process can begin days before an individual begins to feel sick and happens regardless of whether they exhibit symptoms while infected, research shows wastewater testing can help catch missed cases for imminent surges and new variants, especially as at-home nose-swab test kits complicate tracking efforts.

With equipment finally assembled, state lab director Edward Desmond expects the testing lab to be operational by summer.

Wastewater in Houston, New York City and Northern California, for example, showed traces of the omicron variant was detected in the U.S., the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

Stop And Go

The DOH first toyed with the idea of testing sewage for Covid before cases in Hawaii were widespread, Desmond said. The initial plan early in the pandemic was to monitor wastewater at high-risk buildings, including hospitals and congregate living facilities such as nursing homes and prisons.

Testing sewage for entire neighborhoods was not yet under consideration, he said, as the 鈥渦sefulness of wastewater treatment plant testing wasn鈥檛 obvious early in the pandemic,鈥 which in turn caused delays in federal funding for the state to build its own wastewater testing laboratory.

鈥淭he (CDC) has an influence on laboratory grants,鈥 Desmond said. 鈥淭hey had to see the science before they decided this should be a technology they should be pursuing.鈥

It wasn鈥檛 the state, in fact, but the City and County of Honolulu that first started looking for coronavirus in human byproduct as part of the effort to prove the viability of wastewater testing.

In May 2020, the city began working with the Massachusetts firm Biobot to send samples from Oahu treatment plants, said Honolulu Department of Environmental Services deputy director Michael O鈥橩eefe, including from the massive Sand Island facility that serves much of the urban core.

But cross-continental delivery times and nationwide demand for Biobot鈥檚 services meant the city had to wait weeks to get results back. So the city turned to local expertise, and in June 2020 began sending samples to University of Hawaii environmental engineering professor Tao Yan, whose lab .

At its peak, the city was harvesting samples from nine treatment plants across the island every week, paying $300 per test and enabling Yan鈥檚 team of researchers to refine their testing process.

鈥淲hen we first developed the methods, it took about three days from the moment we got the wastewater until we got a result,鈥 said UH post-doctoral researcher Doris Di. 鈥淏ut right now, we would be able to get the results at the end of the day or the next morning.鈥

The UH partnership ended in November 2020, with the wastewater testing was 鈥渕ore accurate or indicative of the actual case counts in the community,鈥 O鈥橩eefe said. Other studies came to a similar conclusion, and the CDC established the National Wastewater Surveillance System that fall.

Yan鈥檚 lab moved on to testing wastewater from individual UH dorms, while the city partnered with Biobot once more as part of a 10-week national study sponsored by the CDC during the summer of 2021.

Throughout this time, the state has worked through the 鈥渆xtremely challenging鈥 process of setting up a new testing lab, said state laboratory post-doctoral fellow Priscilla Seabourn. She said her work has been more administrative than research as she took the lead in sourcing equipment after federal regulators unlocked the necessary grants.

鈥淔or example, I ordered an instrument in July and it just got here,鈥 she said in mid-March. 鈥淚t’s not just shipping; you want to make sure you’re using public funds appropriately. And so, it requires approval from several stakeholders and that can take time.鈥

Staffing has also been a challenge, with the state in the process of hiring a microbiologist to head the project and a part time lab worker. The state lab also needs a replacement for Seabourn, who is heading to the mainland for her family after a year-long tenure.

鈥淭he person before me joined the military, she was here for about a year,鈥 Seabourn said. 鈥淎ny time you鈥檙e in a project, especially one that鈥檚 all encompassing like setting up infrastructure, having turnover like that can always be challenging.鈥

With equipment finally assembled, state lab director Desmond expects the testing lab to be operational by summer. In the meantime, Hawaii is partnering with the CDC and the Canadian firm LuminUltra to supply samples as part of another national study that began in February.

Already, the study is yielding results 鈥 the state detected traces of the highly contagious BA.2 omicron subvariant in Kauai’s wastewater weeks before the DOH reported the first confirmed case Tuesday,

“When we identify a new variant in the wastewater … there is a body of scientific knowledge about what kind of treatments can be used for each of the different variants, so we try to make our results available as quickly as possible because they might influence treatment decisions,” Desmond said.

The DOH estimates the BA.2 subvariant is currently responsible for 40% of new covid infections across the state and 8% of new cases in Kauai County.

A Rocky Road

Some states have found success publishing regular wastewater reports since the beginning stages of the pandemic, including Missouri, which teamed up with the University of Missouri – Columbia to launch its first testing pilot in June 2020.

The program grew to across the state, a spread made possible by a pre-existing courier system for biological samples, said Missouri health department spokeswoman Lisa Cox in an email.

A University of Missouri researcher holds a wastewater sample. Missouri was an early adopter of testing sewage for coronavirus.
A University of Missouri researcher holds a wastewater sample. Missouri was an early adopter of testing sewage for coronavirus. University of Missouri/2020

But Hawaii is not alone in struggling to get its wastewater testing off the ground. In the 18 months since the CDC launched its National Wastewater Surveillance System, Politico reported only about a . Even then, data has been spotty.

California, for example, lists numbers from 23 treatment plants on the NWSS data dashboard for its 39 million people, out of .

Some states simply lacked the manpower and bandwidth to take on the extra responsibility. Others, including Hawaii, faced concerns over privacy.

During Honolulu鈥檚 first partnership with UH in 2020, professor Yan and city officials complained the state was refusing to release nasal swab testing data for the zip codes that feed into wastewater treatment plants.

The DOH, at the time under different leadership, had been refusing to release even basic Covid data to the public on the basis of protecting patient privacy.

But now, the state has taken the lead in promoting the virtues of sewage testing, with plans to extend its mandate beyond the Covid pandemic 鈥渋nto the indefinite future.鈥

鈥淲e’re going to be able, as I mentioned, to look for antibiotic resistance 鈥 or if we had a pandemic caused by influenza A,鈥 Desmond said. 鈥淲e’ll have a wastewater testing system, we鈥檒l have the collection devices, we鈥檒l have the equipment and we’ll have the staff to be able to work on things that come up.鈥

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