Abstract

The health of individuals and communities is more interconnected than ever, and emergent technologies have the potential to improve public health monitoring at both the community and individual level. A systematic literature review of peer-reviewed and gray literature from 2000-present was conducted on the use of biosensors in sanitation infrastructure (such as toilets, sewage pipes and septic tanks) to assess individual and population health. 21 relevant papers were identified using PubMed, Embase, Global Health, CDC Stacks and NexisUni databases and a reflexive thematic analysis was conducted. Biosensors are being developed for a range of uses including monitoring illicit drug usage in communities, screening for viruses and diagnosing conditions such as diabetes. Most studies were nonrandomized, small-scale pilot or lab studies. Of the sanitation-related biosensors found in the literature, 11 gathered population-level data, seven provided real-time continuous data and 14 were noted to be more cost-effective than traditional surveillance methods. The most commonly discussed strength of these technologies was their ability to conduct rapid, on-site analysis. The findings demonstrate the potential of this emerging technology and the concept of Smart Sanitation to enhance health monitoring at the individual level (for diagnostics) as well as at the community level (for disease surveillance).

Highlights

  • Global health is the area of research and practice that prioritizes improving health and achieving health equity for people worldwide [1]

  • This initiative, the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA), acknowledges that outbreaks do not respect borders and that a pathogen can travel across continents in a matter of hours [2]

  • There was heterogeneity in the country of study, as there were 15 countries and one multi-country study represented among the 21 papers

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Summary

Introduction

Global health is the area of research and practice that prioritizes improving health and achieving health equity for people worldwide [1]. It emphasizes transnational health issues and embodies the idea that any one country cannot isolate itself from the public health challenges facing other nations [1]. Global threats require global solutions that are unified; nearly 70 national governments have partnered with international organizations and nongovernmental stakeholders to ‘prevent, detect and respond’ to disease threats [2] This initiative, the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA), acknowledges that outbreaks do not respect borders and that a pathogen can travel across continents in a matter of hours [2]. GHSA is multisectoral and multilateral; in addition to governments, GHSA membership includes the Global Health Security

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