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Canadian Cancer Society Encourages Purchase of Daffodil Bulbs During Annual Campaign

Canadian Cancer Society Encourages Purchase of Daffodil Bulbs During Annual Campaign
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Wastewater COVID Samples Indicate Possible Future Case Spike

The data is the first indicator case numbers could be going up. Since last fall, OU researchers have been testing the sewer water in many municipalities and the University of Oklahoma for COVID particles. “We’ve got this two-week lead time before the county health departments are aware of an outbreak occurring,” said Halley Reeves, VP of Community Health Impact at OU Health. The concentration levels detected went down in the metro in January and stayed that way until the past couple of weeks. “We’ve noticed in areas, pockets, that numbers have gone back up. That’s cause for concern,” said Bradley Stevenson, an associate professor in microbiology at OU.

Oklahoma COVID wastewater testing shows increase in disease presence

Oklahoma COVID wastewater testing shows increase in disease presence COVID wastewater testing in Tulsa and last updated 2021-04-06 12:46:05-04 TULSA, Okla. — Murky, smelly wastewater is what Oklahoma researchers are using to test for COVID. A team is taking the unique approach at the University of Oklahoma. Wastewater testing allows the OU team to gather COVID data one week earlier than human testing. “We excrete COVID through going to the toilet. So, it’s discharged into the toilet and then it’s found in the sewage system, said Halley Reeves, vice president of Community Health Impact for OU Medicine. Our teams will go out to manholes or wastewater treatment facilities and extract the sample.

NEW VARIANTS: Researchers find coronavirus mutations in wastewater

Updated: 5:06 PM CST Feb 26, 2021 KOCO Staff Researchers from the University of Oklahoma, OU Health and the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation have detected mutations in the genes of SARS-CoV-2 samples taken from sewage collected across Oklahoma last month.SARS-CoV-2 causes COVID-19.The mutations that were detected, according to a news release, indicate three areas of concern: The “Pelican” variant, which was recently identified and is largely found in the United States, as well as mutations that are common to the U.K. and South African variants. None of the genetic markers for the Brazilian variant were found. “Mutations indicated that potentially more infectious variants were present at different levels in the wastewater for the different monitored sites,” according to the release.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that many people infected with COVID-19 shed the virus in their waste before they develop symptoms. Because of thi

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