A new San Diego County laboratory equipped with cutting-edge technology is revolutionizing how health officials monitor community disease outbreaks through wastewater testing.
This story originally appeared in the Tuesday, Feb, 6, 2007 edition of the Lassen County Times. Sometimes the experts don’t ...
MIDLAND, Texas (KMID/KPEJ)- Texas Governor Greg Abbott joined state and federal officials Friday in Midland for a ...
Wellington Mayor Andrew Little says he will raise what he has called a "catastrophic" failure of the city's sewage plant with ...
Wellington Water reports this morning that its long outfall pipe from Moa Point is now “partially operating,” and sewage is ...
Following one of the largest sewage spills in U.S. history, University of Maryland researchers have detected high levels of ...
Hg, As, Se and Sb are 4 of the 13 trace metals and metalloids that are considered environmental priority pollutants. They do ...
Skopii was launched by the research group of Ameet J. Pinto, the Carlton S. Wilder Associate Professor in the School of Civil ...
Nearly everyone in the United States has forever chemicals in their blood. Companies have long used these chemicals to make products that withstand water, oil and heat, including non-stick pans and ...
Antibiotics that are essential in clinical care continue to pose a growing challenge for environmental monitoring once they ...
Wastewater surveillance testing for measles can alert public health authorities before and during a measles outbreak.
Public health is a key component of a thriving community. A new way to gauge illnesses could alert healthcare providers even earlier.
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