2026-06-08T10:01:42.192Z / 路透社
6月8日(路透社)——流行病学专家今夏将忙于分析污水和社交媒体内容,目标是在世界杯期间保障球迷和公众远离重症疾病。本届世界杯是有史以来规模最大、全球参与度最高的群体性集会之一。
主办方表示,一支位于华盛顿特区的公共卫生小队计划监测污水和网络言论,以便在世界杯参赛队伍、赛事举办地以及数百万观众所在的美国和加拿大任何城市出现传染病时,及时发现并追踪疫情。
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这项为期39天的赛事将于周四在墨西哥开赛。预计将有超过650万名球迷从100多个国家前来观看在美国、加拿大和墨西哥举办的104场比赛。
卫生安全专家指出,此次赛事规模庞大且涉及跨全球旅行,加剧了疾病快速传播的风险,而此时美国本已紧张的公共卫生资源正忙于应对国内外麻疹、埃博拉和汉坦病毒暴发。
此次新型疾病追踪行动的组织者表示,特朗普政府时期的预算和人员削减,以及美国退出世界卫生组织,进一步加剧了这些挑战。
基因测序分析
为了实时提供潜在威胁数据,新组建的公共卫生专家团队将乔治敦大学的一间实验室改造为流行病学指挥中心。该机构汇集了支持政府机构运作的学术机构、非营利组织和私营企业。
该团队已准备每日提交情况报告,向地方、州、联邦和国际层面的医院应急管理人员及公共卫生当局,以及世界杯足球赛管理机构国际足联,通报新出现的风险和需要立即采取行动的情况。
该指挥中心是与MedStar Health地区医院连锁集团合作启动的,同时也是为2028年洛杉矶夏季奥运会等未来赛事进行的一次试运行。MedStar拥有全美13个生物安全防护实验室之一。
乔治敦大学全球卫生科学与安全中心主任、此次新型疾病监测项目负责人丽贝卡·卡茨表示,先进的污水分析技术是监测传染病威胁的关键手段,该技术通过DNA和RNA测序直接识别多种微生物的基因序列,无需在实验室中培养样本。
“这项技术的功能极为强大,”卡茨说。她的团队目前正在接收来自美国和加拿大多个采集点的相关数据,以及三个世界杯主办国的其他各类健康监测来源数据。
从埃博拉到麻疹
在污水中检测到致病微生物可以预示疫情即将暴发,为卫生官员留出时间提醒临床医生留意可能被误诊的疾病症状,并敦促公众采取预防措施。
当前非洲的埃博拉危机已引发媒体广泛关注。但卡茨表示,这种常致命的出血热对北美普通民众“风险极低”。来自埃博拉疫情中心刚果民主共和国的世界杯团队和后勤人员已在比利时接受预防性隔离,随后再前往美国,尽管大多数球员在疫情暴发时身处欧洲。
卡茨表示,其团队将特别关注麻疹的传播情况。今年美国麻疹病例数已接近纪录高点——目前约有2000例——且墨西哥和加拿大部分地区疫情已出现反弹。
登革热(又称“断骨热”)和与之密切相关的基孔肯雅热等蚊媒疾病也带来了额外风险。这两种疾病均起源于热带地区,可通过受感染的旅行者携带入境,再由蚊子传播。
卡茨召集了20名同事,并获得了30多家其他机构的志愿支持,以此组建指挥中心团队。其中包括多家污水监测公司,它们将免费收集并筛查污水样本,并与卡茨的团队共享数据。
社交媒体监测
卡茨表示,其他关键工具还包括跟踪匿名电子健康记录数据,以及搜索开源社交媒体平台,寻找疫情传播集群的相关信息。
她援引了一个过往案例:公共卫生官员通过社交媒体上关于卫生纸销量突然激增的讨论,精准定位了一起胃肠道疾病暴发事件。
卡茨表示,乔治敦大学的团队将协助美国多个机构开展工作,包括疾病控制与预防中心以及战略准备和应对管理局。
该指挥中心的资金支持来自一家小型家族基金会和乔治敦大学,内布拉斯加大学等合作伙伴也提供了实物捐助。
史蒂夫·戈尔曼 洛杉矶报道;悉达什·马塔奥莱 班加罗尔补充报道;唐娜·布赖森、罗莎尔巴·奥布莱恩 编辑
Health experts to screen US wastewater for disease outbreaks during World Cup
2026-06-08T10:01:42.192Z / Reuters
June 8 (Reuters) – Epidemiologists will be busy this summer sifting through sewage and social media with the goal of keeping soccer fans and the public safe from severe illness during the World Cup, one of the largest and most globally diverse mass gatherings ever anticipated.
A public health squad based in Washington, D.C., plans to monitor wastewater and internet chatter to detect and track infectious diseases should they emerge in any of the U.S. or Canadian cities hosting World Cup players, their matches, and millions of spectators, organizers said.
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The 39-day event kicks off in Mexico on Thursday. More than 6.5 million soccer fans are expected to travel from over 100 countries to witness 104 games in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.
The scale of the event and the globe-spanning travel involved pose a heightened risk of rapid disease transmission at a time when strained U.S. public health resources are coping at home and abroad with outbreaks of measles, Ebola and hantavirus, health security experts say.
Budget and staffing cuts under the Trump administration, along with the U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization, have exacerbated those challenges, according to organizers of the new disease-tracking initiative.
GENETIC STRANDS
Stepping in to provide real-time data about potential threats, the newly formed team of public health experts has converted a Georgetown University laboratory into an epidemiological command post. The facility brings together academic institutions, non-profit organizations and private companies working in support of government agencies.
The team is already preparing a daily status report to flag emerging risks and any immediate need for action to hospital emergency managers and public health authorities at the local, state, federal and international level, as well as FIFA, soccer’s governing body and organizer of the World Cup.
The operations center, launched in collaboration with the MedStar Health regional hospital chain, is also a trial run for future events, including the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. MedStar hosts one of the nation’s 13 biocontainment units.
Advanced wastewater analysis, using DNA and RNA sequencing to find genetic strands from a range of microbes without requiring laboratory culture, is a key element in monitoring infectious disease threats, said Rebecca Katz, director of Georgetown’s Center for Global Health Science and Security and head of the new disease surveillance effort.
“It’s incredibly powerful,” Katz said. Her team is currently receiving such data from collection sites in the U.S. and Canada, as well as from various other health monitoring sources in all three World Cup host countries.
FROM EBOLA TO MEASLES
Detecting disease-causing microorganisms in wastewater can signal an outbreak in the making, giving health officials time to warn medical clinicians to look out for symptoms of diseases that might otherwise be misdiagnosed, and to urge the public to take precautions.
Considerable media attention has focused on the current Ebola crisis in Africa. But Katz said the often-fatal hemorrhagic fever poses a “very low risk to the general public” in North America. The World Cup team and support staff from the Democratic Republic of Congo, the country at the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak, have been undergoing a precautionary quarantine in Belgium before traveling to the United States, although most of the players were in Europe at the time of the outbreak.
Katz said her team would be paying special attention to the spread of measles, which is approaching a record for U.S. case numbers this year – around 2,000 so far – and has resurged in parts of Mexico and Canada.
Additional risks are posed by mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue, also known as “breakbone fever,” and a close cousin, chikungunya. Both originate in the tropics and can be carried by infected travelers and then be transmitted by mosquitoes.
Katz enlisted 20 colleagues along with pro bono support and assistance from 30 other entities for her operations center. They include several wastewater surveillance companies that are collecting and screening sewage samples and sharing their data with Katz’s team without charge.
SOCIAL LISTENING
Other key tools include tracking anonymized data from electronic health records and scouring open-source social media platforms for information pointing to transmission clusters, Katz said.
She cited a past example of public health officials pinpointing an outbreak of gastrointestinal illness from social media chatter about a sudden uptick in sales of toilet paper.
The Georgetown team will augment the work of several U.S. agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, Katz said.
Financial support for the center has come from a small family foundation and Georgetown, along with in-kind contributions from such partners as the University of Nebraska.
Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; additional reporting by Siddhi Mahatole in Bengaluru; editing by Donna Bryson and Rosalba O’Brien
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