Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2088
Title: COVID-19 Pandemic modulates the environmental contamination level of enteric bacteria from WWTPs
Authors: Banciu, Alina 
Pascu, Luoana Florentina 
Stoica, Catalina 
Lucaciu, Irina 
Feodorov, Laura 
Nita-Lazar, Mihai 
Affiliations: National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, ECOIND 
Keywords: Pathogen;Wastewater;Pharmaceutical compounds;;COVID-19
Issue Date: Apr-2024
Publisher: National Research and Development Institute for Industrial Ecology, INCD-ECOIND
Abstract: 
The COVID-19 pandemic was a challenge for the whole world, and it had major secondary effects on humans and environmental health. The viral infection induced, in many situations, secondary bacterial infections, especially enteric infections, by destabilizing the balance of
the gastrointestinal microbiota. The large-scale use of antibiotics and biocides for both curative and
preventive purposes has resulted in an increase in bacterial resistance, and at the same time, the possibility of pathogenic microorganism multiplication and their dissemination to natural environments.
Wastewater is the main vector of fecal microorganisms that favors their dissemination into natural
aquatic ecosystems. The present paper aims to analyze the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the
microbiological quality of wastewater from sewage treatment plants in Romania and its impact on
receiving rivers. In order to highlight different and important areas in Romania, three cities from the
east, center and west were selected for a microbiological evaluation of their WWTP influents and
effluents from the pre-COVID-19 period and during the COVID-19 pandemic peak period, when the
COVID-19 pandemic had a direct impact on WWTP microbial compositions. Our study shows that
a higher level of contamination with fecal bacteria is linked to a higher COVID-19 incidence. The
increased usage of pharmaceutical compounds, in turn, increases the number of resistant bacteria
reaching the environment via WWTP effluents.
Description: 
Water, 2024, 16, https://doi.org/10.3390/w16081092.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2088
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