WCPO: UC students work on COVID-19 surveillance to prevent surge

Engineering students talk to WCPO about UC's partnership with the Ohio Department of Health

WCPO highlighted the University of Cincinnati's surveillance program for COVID-19 in partnership with the Ohio Department of Health.

UC College of Engineering and Applied Science Associate Professor David Wendell and his students have spent the past three years tracking infections among students living in UC’s dorms and taking steps to prevent a spike in cases across campus.

231121aCOVID042.CR2
UC engineering professor David Wendell and his students are conducting COVID surveillance through tests of wastewater. It's a tool that epidemiologists are using to monitor the spread of communicable disease.

UC Associate Professor David Wendell holds joint appointments in biomedical and environmental engineering. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

Several times a week, students fan out across campus in latex gloves, clean room garb and eye protection to collect wastewater samples. Special pumps beneath manhole covers collect small samples of wastewater at regular intervals during the day to capture longitudinal data about the population on campus, particularly those living in the dorms.

“One of the biggest advantages of wastewater surveillance is to pick up the virus in the population before people are even symptomatic,” said Wendell, who holds a joint appointment in UC’s departments of biomedical engineering and chemical and environmental engineering.

“So you know they have COVID before they do,” he said.

WCPO spoke with UC graduate student Patrick Kurtz and undergraduate engineering students Miriam Knutson and Milo Shrive about the weekly sampling.

Kurtz said the incidence of COVID-19 in January testing has been low, but the surveillance will indicate any potential spikes in infections.

Sampling will continue at least through the spring semester.

Watch the WCPO report.

Featured image at top: UC College of Engineering and Applied Science students collect samples of wastewater to track COVID-19 on campus. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

A reporter interviews two students on UC's Uptown campus.

WCPO's Krizia Williams talks to UC College of Engineering and Applied Science students Milo Shrive and Miriam Knutson. Photo/Michael Miller

Related Stories

4584 Results
3

UC’s summer semester offers students short sessions, flexibility

April 12, 2021

Coming into the summertime of 2020, Sumedha Kappagantula was considering ways to make the most her opportunities during what is usually a break from the academic rigor of her traditional school year. As a Biomedical Engineering major in the UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Kappagantula is minoring in Chemistry and Biological Sciences, taking classes through the College of Arts and Sciences. She thought summer semester would be a great time to get ahead in her coursework, and move her degree forward.

6

UC garners sustainable, green campus success

April 19, 2021

University of Cincinnati Gold LEED certifications, student-involved energy-efficient programs and climate-friendly green technologies elevate UC to a national award-winning sustainable campus.

8

Futuristic cars may soon take flight

April 28, 2021

The Cincinnati Innovation District and University of Cincinnati team up with partners in 1819 Innovation Hub DriveOhio, Cincinnati Bell and Microsoft to innovate with UC talent and help bring future innovation within reach in FlyOhio student challenge.

9

UC Day of Giving a success

April 28, 2021

University of Cincinnati Day of Giving’s 24-hour challenge was a tremendous success this year, raising $2,219,197 with 3,232 gifts. The fourth annual UC Day of Giving raised its most money to date with alumni, donors, students, faculty and staff joining together to support UC and UC Health.

10

'To make him proud was high on her list'

April 1, 2021

Alex Lewis lost her 82-year-old grandfather to Covid-19 just five weeks before her dream school showed up on the front steps of Roger Bacon High School to tell the senior that she has been admitted to the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing as part of a touching Decision Day surprise effort this year.