TY - JOUR
T1 - Communicating wastewater-based surveillance data to drive action
AU - Farkas, Kata
AU - Kaya, Devrim
AU - Maal-Bared, Rasha
AU - Al-Mustapha, Ahmad I.
AU - Tandukar, Sarmila
AU - Keenum, Ishi
AU - Gunnar, Teemu
AU - Bivins, Aaron
AU - Wade, Matthew
AU - Bibby, Kyle
AU - Pitkänen, Tarja M.
AU - Tiwari, Ananda
PY - 2025/9/9
Y1 - 2025/9/9
N2 - As exemplified during the COVID-19 pandemic, wastewater-based surveillance (WBS) can deliver near real-time, population-level pathogen data to guide public health action. Its impact, however, hinges on timely, transparent, and context-specific communication to stakeholders, including health authorities, policymakers, scientists, clinicians, and the public. This review examines current WBS communication practices, identifies persistent challenges, and proposes strategies to enhance relevance. Key challenges include data complexity, lack of standardised communication frameworks, ethical and privacy concerns, and variable stakeholder capabilities. The strategic use of digital platforms, such as dashboards, reports, press releases, and social media, alongside traditional media, can broaden reach and aid interpretation. Rapid, accurate, and empathetic communication is essential during health crises to maintain trust and counter misinformation. Standardised messaging, simplified data visualisations, and integration with clinical surveillance systems enhance credibility and usability. Strengthening cross-sector collaboration, improving data interpretation, and translating findings into actionable insights are essential to maximising the public health benefits of WBS. Immediate efforts should prioritise building globally coordinated, adaptive communication networks that can evolve alongside surveillance technologies and emerging health threats. Overall, the review underscores the key role of strategic communication in advancing WBS for global health preparedness and optimising public health actions.
AB - As exemplified during the COVID-19 pandemic, wastewater-based surveillance (WBS) can deliver near real-time, population-level pathogen data to guide public health action. Its impact, however, hinges on timely, transparent, and context-specific communication to stakeholders, including health authorities, policymakers, scientists, clinicians, and the public. This review examines current WBS communication practices, identifies persistent challenges, and proposes strategies to enhance relevance. Key challenges include data complexity, lack of standardised communication frameworks, ethical and privacy concerns, and variable stakeholder capabilities. The strategic use of digital platforms, such as dashboards, reports, press releases, and social media, alongside traditional media, can broaden reach and aid interpretation. Rapid, accurate, and empathetic communication is essential during health crises to maintain trust and counter misinformation. Standardised messaging, simplified data visualisations, and integration with clinical surveillance systems enhance credibility and usability. Strengthening cross-sector collaboration, improving data interpretation, and translating findings into actionable insights are essential to maximising the public health benefits of WBS. Immediate efforts should prioritise building globally coordinated, adaptive communication networks that can evolve alongside surveillance technologies and emerging health threats. Overall, the review underscores the key role of strategic communication in advancing WBS for global health preparedness and optimising public health actions.
KW - COVID-19 - epidemiology
KW - Communication
KW - Humans
KW - Information Dissemination
KW - Public Health
KW - SARS-CoV-2
KW - Wastewater - virology
KW - Wastewater-Based Epidemiological Monitoring
KW - disease outbreak response
KW - public health surveillance
KW - research translation
KW - risk communication
KW - surveillance systems
U2 - 10.2166/wh.2025.080
DO - 10.2166/wh.2025.080
M3 - Article
SN - 1477-8920
VL - 23
SP - 1095
EP - 1108
JO - Journal of Water and Health
JF - Journal of Water and Health
IS - 9
M1 - jwh2025080
ER -