Published on in Vol 11, No 1 (2019):

Tracking harmful chemicals and pathogens using the Human Health Observatory at ASU

Tracking harmful chemicals and pathogens using the Human Health Observatory at ASU

Tracking harmful chemicals and pathogens using the Human Health Observatory at ASU

The full text of this article is available as a PDF download by clicking here.

Journals

  1. Sims N, Kasprzyk-Hordern B. Future perspectives of wastewater-based epidemiology: Monitoring infectious disease spread and resistance to the community level. Environment International 2020;139:105689 View
  2. Clarke L, O’Brien J, Murray A, Gaze W, Thomas K. A review of wastewater-based epidemiology for antimicrobial resistance surveillance. Journal of Environmental Exposure Assessment 2024;3(1) View
  3. Jacobs D, McDaniel T, Varsani A, Halden R, Forrest S, Lee H. Wastewater Monitoring Raises Privacy and Ethical Considerations. IEEE Transactions on Technology and Society 2021;2(3):116 View
  4. Faleye T, Driver E, Bowes D, Adhikari S, Adams D, Varsani A, Halden R, Scotch M. Pan-Enterovirus Amplicon-Based High-Throughput Sequencing Detects the Complete Capsid of a EVA71 Genotype C1 Variant via Wastewater-Based Epidemiology in Arizona. Viruses 2021;13(1):74 View
  5. Hart O, Halden R. Computational analysis of SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 surveillance by wastewater-based epidemiology locally and globally: Feasibility, economy, opportunities and challenges. Science of The Total Environment 2020;730:138875 View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Juneja C, Tripathy P, Prakash O, Panchal D, Sharma A, Vijay R, Pal S. Wastewater-Based Epidemiology for the Assessment of Human Exposure to Environmental Pollutants. View