Wastewater and environmental surveillance
Wastewater and environmental surveillance (WES) is disease surveillance using samples from sewage, or other environmental waters impacted by human wastewater. WES has potential to provide information alongside other forms of disease surveillance to fill gaps in other surveillance data and inform the public health response. WES has been successfully used for many years in the polio eradication programme and more recently in the COVID-19 pandemic response.
WHO is working on guidance and capacity development for WES, for one or more pathogen, as part of a collaborative surveillance approach with a focus on guiding WES investment to targets where; WES data provides actionable information for significant public health challenges in the local context, where methods are technically and operationally feasible, where WES is ethically and legally acceptable, and where WES can be effectively optimized though integration with other targets and clinical surveillance.
Pilot versions of the pathogen agnostic prioritization guidance and the first six WES pathogen summary sheets can be downloaded below (in English, French, Russian and Spanish).
Feedback from users will be open throughout 2025 at this link – WES Feedback form.
Prioritization guidance

WES pathogen summaries
Relevant publications
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Considerations for wastewater and environmental surveillance for monkeypox virus: Interim guidance
Wastewater and environmental surveillance (WES) has potential to provide actionable information as part of multimodal surveillance for mpox. Use cases...

Environmental surveillance for SARS-CoV-2 to complement other public health surveillance
This guidance supersedes the first April 2022 version. It is targeted at public health officials who want to understand and integrate complementary environmental...

Defining collaborative surveillance: A core concept for strengthening the global architecture for health...
The complex challenges highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic and other major health emergencies emphasize the need to rethink our approach to surveillance,...
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