Integrated surveillance strategies for water quality and diarrheal disease use Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment (QMRA) to evaluate the risks associated with exposure to microbial pathogens. QMRA combines microbiology, epidemiology, statistics, and risk assessment to estimate pathogen-specific risks in different settings, such as water supply systems. By assessing water surveillance systems, QMRA helps optimise sampling frequency, locations, and types, identifying gaps and improvement strategies.
To support public health officers in European member states, a decision-making tool based on mathematical models was developed in collaboration with our partner RIVM under the ECDC project. Challenges include variability in microbial exposure levels and data availability across different socioeconomic and geographic settings.
Our project goes beyond the current state by collecting pathogen-specific environmental and diarrheal disease data across various income settings, improving the accuracy of climate-sensitive QMRA assessments. Additionally, QMRA assessments consider microbial exposures using high-resolution maps generated in SPRINGS, enhancing their ability to assess diarrheal risk under different climate scenarios. This helps guide interventions to decrease climate-dependent diarrheal risks, informing surveillance infrastructure and prioritising interventions.