COVID-19 research at the BCCDC Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation Sat, 13 Jan 2024 00:28:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-Favicon-32x32.jpg COVID-19 research at the BCCDC Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation 32 32 Newsletter #29: October 2021 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/newsletter-29-october-2021/ Thu, 28 Oct 2021 19:56:29 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/newsletter-29-october-2021/ Project Update: BCCDC’s COVID-19 Wastewater Surveillance in Metro Vancouver Communities, BCCDC Foundation Welcomes our First Director of Operations, Activate Health to Protect Yourself and Your Community This Fall and Winter, and more in our October newsletter. Check it out!

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Project Update: BCCDC’s COVID-19 Wastewater Surveillance in Metro Vancouver Communities https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/project-update-bccdcs-covid-19-wastewater-surveillance-in-metro-vancouver-communities/ Wed, 27 Oct 2021 21:29:00 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/project-update-bccdcs-covid-19-wastewater-surveillance-in-metro-vancouver-communities/ With the help of some funding from the BCCDC Foundation, Dr Melissa Glier and Dr Natalie Prystajecky provide an update on their research progress on how wastewater data continues to be used in the pandemic response.

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Guest post by:
Dr Natalie Prystajecky
Clinical Associate Professor, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia
Program Head, Environmental Microbiology, BCCDC Public Health Laboratory

Dr Melissa Glier
Research Scientist, Environmental Microbiology, BCCDC Public Health Laboratory

Last summer, Dr Natalie Prystajecky (Principal Investigator) and Dr Melissa Glier (lead researcher) provided an introduction to wastewater testing for SARS-CoV-2. Here, Drs Glier and Prystajecky provide an update on research progress and how wastewater data continues to be used in the pandemic response.         

Soon after the World Health Organization declared the global outbreak of COVID-19 a pandemic, the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) Public Health Laboratory (PHL) and Metro Vancouver began working together to test wastewater for SARS-CoV-2.

We quickly leveraged an existing collaboration, methods, and equipment for testing enteric viruses in wastewater to be able to test for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. But we weren’t the only lab in Canada doing this work–across the nation, researchers like us were developing and optimizing methods. To ensure that the methods used across Canada were robust and that the data were comparable, the Canadian Water Network’s COVID-19 Wastewater Coalition conducted an Inter-Laboratory Study, hosted by Canada’s National Microbiology Laboratory.

Jenny Kopensky (technician) holding a COSCa sampler that was used to collect UBC residences wastewater from a manhole nearby
Tina Lee (co-op student) holding the electronegative filter inside the COSCa, it’s purpose is to attract viruses such as SARS-CoV-2
Liam Byrne (co-op student) using a robot to extract RNA from the wastewater sample

The goal of this study was to better understand the variability associated with methods that are being used in Canada, with a focus on method optimization. This study set the stage for sharing methods and data amongst Canadian experts to achieve the collective goal of rapid development of methods that can support public health. The study’s key finding and recommendations have been captured in an outcomes report and a publication where Dr Glier is the second author.

By participating in the inter-laboratory study, our team was able to optimize our methods and apply them to testing for SARS-CoV-2 in five wastewater treatment plants in Metro Vancouver, which cover nearly 50% of BC’s population and located within two regional health authorities.

The SARS-CoV-2 wastewater data is compared to trends in the incidence of community cases by BCCDC’s public health physician Dr David McVae, medical geographer Sunny Mak, and data analyst Michael Kuo. Weekly reports are shared with medical health officers and epidemiologists at the regional health authorities, staff at the BCCDC and Metro Vancouver. In addition, Metro Vancouver launched an online tool which allows residents to track the SARS-CoV-2 viral load in wastewater at each of the region’s five treatment plants. The results (wastewater data graphed with the case data over time) are also available online within the bi-weekly BC COVID-19 Data Summaries.

Furthermore, last year we collaborated with UBC’s assistant professor Dr Ryan Ziels and PhD student Xuan Lin to develop methods to detect SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in positive wastewater samples. This project led to the development of a rapid sequencing method (3-day) to effectively track COVID-19 variants of concern within a region. More details pertaining to this study can be found on the UBC News website and in this publication.

Our team continues to work on method development and recently adopted an alternative sampling method. For the work to date, we have focused on sampling from wastewater influent (as the wastewater enters the wastewater treatment plant). This allows us to test wastewater from an entire community.

We are now evaluating a method to test wastewater as it exits a building; this allows us to test the wastewater for a specific community. Wastewater samples are collected by placing a testing device called the COVID-19 sewer cage (COSCa) into a manhole as wastewater exits a building.

Xuan Lin (PhD student) and UBC Energy & Water Systems (EWS) staff retrieving  and deploying a COSCa into a manhole
UBC Energy & Water Systems (EWS) staff deploying a COSCa into a manhole

The COSCa device, which is 3D printed, was created by PhD student Emalie Hayes at Dalhousie University and emphasizes the role of innovation in responding to the pandemic. We are using the COSCa sampling method, in collaboration with the Ziels laboratory, to investigate SARS-CoV-2 and the variants of concern in wastewater discharged from UBC residences. By the end of the project, we will have developed a robust wastewater testing program to support public health decision makers respond to the COVID-19 pandemic in BC.

Dr Melissa Glier holding a brand new COSCa shipped as a gift from the Gagnon Laboratory at Dalhousie.

We are already starting to plan for wastewater testing beyond COVID-19, with an aim to build a comprehensive enhanced wastewater surveillance system for BC. This includes adding additional testing targets of public health concern, such as for surveillance of flu, foodborne pathogens or organisms carrying antimicrobial resistance. We anticipate the wastewater-based testing will have an important role in surveillance systems of the future.


We’d like to recognize our funders: the BCCDC Foundation for Public Health, NSERC, Metro Vancouver, and Health Canada.

We also recognize the enormous contribution of our team and collaborators, including the team that processes and tests the samples: Liam Byrne and Tina Lee (current coops), Tenysha RossVanMierlo, Matthias Krushel, Ziwen Ran (previous co-ops), and Jennifer Kopetzky (technician). We recognize the contributions of the following as well; Christine Tchao, Daisy Yu, Tracy Chan, Dr John Tyson (BCCDC PHL); Dr Ryan Ziels, Xuan Lin, Kevin Kuchinski, (UBC); Dr David McVea, Sunny Mak, Michael Kuo (BCCDC) Farida Bishay, Alvin Louie, Daisy Espinosa, Dr Andjela Knezevic-Stevanovic (Metro Vancouver), Dr. Chand Mangat, Dr. Michael Mulvey, Dr. Anil Nichani (NML/PHAC); Dr. Alex Chik, Bernadette Conant, and Dr. Steve Hrudey (CWN).


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Cats Needed for COVID-19 and Cats Study https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/cats-needed-for-covid-19-and-cats-study/ Wed, 19 May 2021 16:29:52 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/cats-needed-for-covid-19-and-cats-study/ Cats needed for BC Centre for Disease Control study! This study will help fill important information gaps on companion animals and COVID-19. Click below to learn more.

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Guest post by:
Dr. Erin Fraser, Principal Investigator
Public Health Veterinarian, BC Centre for Disease Control

Hattaw Khalid, Project Coordinator
University of British Columbia


The COVID-19 pandemic most likely originated from the SARS-CoV-2 virus in an animal reservoir (bats), then it likely jumped to a secondary animal species before it was passed to humans. Although this often happens in nature, there is so much that we still don’t know about how and when these jumps occur.

While the SARS-CoV-2 virus has now clearly established itself in human hosts, the range of animal species in which it can replicate remains unknown. We have seen natural infections of COVID-19 in minks, ferrets and cats, but there is still so much that we don’t know about how this transmission occurs and whether or not humans can be infected from their companion animals.

Photo credit: Getty Images & BC Centre for Disease Control

This study aims to address an important knowledge gap on COVID-19 transmission dynamics and the disease risk pathways between people and cats in households with a confirmed human case of COVID-19.

The study uses a passive recruitment method, which means participants enroll themselves into the study rather than being sought out. Once a participant reaches out to us, we contact them to complete a pre-sampling survey by phone. For the survey, we ask questions about daily interactions of pet owners with their cat(s); this will help us understand if certain behaviours increase the risk of transmission.

Once the survey is completed, we schedule a time for the sample collection team to visit the household and collect samples. The process is contactless and everything is disinfected before and after use to ensure the safety of the team as well as the participating households.

Owners are asked to place the cat in a carrier and place the carrier outside the front door. Once the door is closed the team picks up the cat and collects samples in an enclosed outdoor canopy. Our sample collection team is made up of highly trained veterinary professionals that use fear-free tactics to help put the cats at ease. Cats that are too fractious will not be sampled and will be removed from the study. Once again, the safety of the cats and the veterinary team is a top priority.

Samples are collected twice within a 10-day period; if a cat tests positive for COVID-19 we will continue to test it until we have a negative result. Participants will be informed of the testing results and will be provided with animal care instructions if their cat(s) test positive for the virus.

  • Blood sample
  • Nasal/oral swab
  • Rectal swab

Recruitment is ongoing until we reach our target sample number. If you’re interested in participating, or would like to learn more, please visit our website here.


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Newsletter #15: August 2020 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/newsletter-15-august-2020/ Mon, 24 Aug 2020 16:27:28 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/newsletter-15-august-2020/ Guest posts from the BC Centre for Disease Control experts on the latest COVID-19 research we’re funding, waste water testing as an early warning sign, and injury prevention--all in our August 2020 newsletter!

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