Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Leveraging Emerging Technology to Detect Biothreats Subject of Recent Summit

Image of Leveraging Emerging Technology to Detect Biothreats Subject of Recent Summit. The Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division’s Global Emerging Infections Surveillance Branch hosted its first Next-Generation Sequencing Summit in Silver Spring, Maryland, in September 2023. Attendees included representatives from the GEIS network of global partner laboratories and other U.S. government agencies. (DOD photo)

The Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division’s Global Emerging Infections Surveillance branch hosted its first Next-Generation Sequencing Summit in Silver Spring, Maryland. Attendees included representatives from the GEIS network of global partner laboratories and other U.S. government agencies. AFHSD is a division of Defense Health Agency Public Health.

“This meeting was our first effort of bringing together, in-person, the world class level of sequencing and bioinformatic expertise within the GEIS partner network,” said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Matthew Kasper, chief of the GEIS branch. “These discussions are critical in the GEIS program’s support of the priorities detailed in the 2023 Biodefense Posture Review.”

The presentations covered a variety of topics, including sequencing capabilities and challenges throughout the GEIS network; the Pathogen Detection Project, a blinded panel proficiency test assessing all aspects of unbiased sequencing and bioinformatics methods; bacterial pathogen sequencing; data operationalization, and topics such as wastewater surveillance and pathogen agnostic sequencing.

GEIS Sequencing Summit U.S. Army Capt. William Kowallis from the Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen presented on wastewater surveillance for infectious diseases during the first day of the Next-Generation Sequencing Summit. The summit occurred in September 2023. (DOD photo)

At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the GEIS network leveraged its existing sequencing capabilities through the GEIS Next-Generation Sequencing and Bioinformatics Consortium to rapidly pivot focus and scale up sequencing of SARS-CoV-2- positive samples. The resulting shift in capabilities allowed for close monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 variants within the Military Health System and in relevant locations for service members around the globe.

Now, public health professionals say that the infectious disease surveillance community has an opportunity to adjust priorities and further explore emerging technologies and methods that became increasingly available during the pandemic, such as pathogen agnostic sequencing and wastewater surveillance.

Experts also add that increased capabilities of Department of Defense medical and public health laboratories allow experts to detect and characterize infectious disease threats before they become widespread. These emerging technologies and methods can provide critical information to enhance early warning of biothreats as noted in the 2023 Biodefense Posture Review.

According to DOD public health officials, during the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, wastewater surveillance was used to monitor increased community transmission of the virus.
They say the entire process of such surveillance–from collecting the samples to processing and performing the scientific analysis of those samples—is particularly challenging. Conference participants discussed best practices for wastewater surveillance, led by experts from the Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen.

Public health experts say that determining how to successfully implement wastewater surveillance may eventually have other useful public health applications, such as tracking antimicrobial resistance—which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines as what happens when germs like bacteria and fungi develop the ability to defeat the drugs designed to kill them.

Each session sparked in-depth discussions, fostered connections between GEIS partner laboratories, and opened avenues for interagency collaborations.

DOD public health officials also added that the GEIS program office, in coordination with the NGSBC, will continue to refine priorities for sequencing and genomic surveillance. They say that outcomes of these discussions will inform the future of the GEIS strategy and the strategic direction for the GEIS branch in the context of the larger DOD public health and biosurveillance initiatives.

“The summit serves a critical function to inform and expedite the next generation of sequencing technology,” said U.S. Air Force Col. Patrick Kennedy, chief of the DHA Public Health’s Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division. “As good stewards of tax dollars, we can leverage the capabilities of our partners, while minimizing redundancy where possible.”

Learn more about the GEIS program at the Global Emerging Infections Surveillance website.

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Jun 8, 2023

National Guard Provides Medical Treatment to Tribes in Idaho, Nevada

Approximately 100 citizen-soldiers and airmen from Arizona, Idaho, Minnesota, and Nevada National Guard provided care for two Native American tribes in Idaho and Nevada as part of Operation Nimiipuu Health, a Department of Defense Innovative Readiness Training program. Members of the National Guard provided medical, dental, and optometry services to the Nez Perce Tribe and surrounding community of Lapwai, Idaho, May 16-18.  (Photo by U.S. National Guard Master Sgt. Becky Vanshur)

Members of the National Guard provided medical, dental, and optometry services to the Nez Perce Tribe and surrounding community of Lapwai, Idaho, May 16-18. The unit also provided behavioral health services to members of the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes and the surrounding community of Duck Valley, Nevada May 22-25.

Article Around MHS
Jun 2, 2023

Operationalizing Army Medicine in the Pacific

U.S. Army Maj. Nekkeya McGee, a clinical operations blood operations consultant with the 18th Medical Command, discusses medical logistics with a Land Forces Pacific Symposium and Exposition 2023 attendee in Honolulu, Hawaii, on May 16, 2023. (Photo by U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Timothy Hughes)

More than 2,000 senior U.S. Army leaders, military allies and partners, government representatives, and industry partners participated in the Association of the United States Army’s Land Forces Pacific Symposium and Exposition 2023. A major theme was operationalizing the National Defense Strategy.

Article
Jun 1, 2023

Absolute and Relative Morbidity Burdens Attributable to Various Illnesses and Injuries Among Active Component Members, U.S. Armed Forces, 2022

This annual summary uses several health care burden measures to quantify the impacts of various illnesses and injuries in 2022 among members of the active component of the U.S. Armed Forces. Health care burden metrics include the total number of medical encounters, individuals affected, and hospital bed days.

Article
Jun 1, 2023

Absolute and Relative Morbidity Burdens Attributable to Various Illnesses and Injuries Among Active Component Members, U.S. Coast Guard, 2022

This report employs the same disease classification system and health care burden measures as employed in the MSMR burden analysis of the U.S. Armed Forces active component to quantify the impacts of various illnesses and injuries among members of the active component of the U.S. Coast Guard in 2022.

Article Around MHS
May 30, 2023

Navy Expeditionary Medical Unit Rotations Provide Ongoing Support in the Middle East

U.S. Navy Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Freeman Morrison, a biomedical technician, left, and U.S. Navy Lt. j. g. Andrew Mappus, an emergency room nurse, right, assigned to Navy Expeditionary Medical Unit 10- Gulf, Rotation 13, are monitoring an U.S. Army Medic Task Force Buckeye, 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, as he draws blood from an soldier on Dec. 20. (Photo by U.S. Navy Capt. Jerrol Walla)

The 30-member team conducted enhanced shore-based activities at Erbil Air Base in Iraq, where they provided life, limb, and eyesight-saving care to the U.S. armed forces, Department of Defense, civilian contractors, and multi-national coalition forces. They also provided critical support to facilities in the Eastern Syria Security Area.

Article Around MHS
May 11, 2023

USAMMDA Team Equips a Worldwide Force

Leaders with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity and Regional Training Site-Medical stand for a group photo during a hospital conversion fielding at Fort Gordon, Georgia, on March 7. USAMMDA’s Force Sustainment Directorate, which worked for more than a year to coordinate the hospital center shipment, is responsible for the wholesale procurement, production, fielding, sustainment, and recovery of medical sets, kits, and outfits.  (Photo by Rick Bower, U.S. Army)

In the multi-domain battlefields of today and tomorrow, the U.S. Army’s supply priorities include more than the food, weapons, and cotton gauzes that have sustained American warfighters during past wars. A select team with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity—the U.S. Army’s premier medical development command—work each day to field the ...

Article Around MHS
May 9, 2023

U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command Recognized for Role in Afghan Humanitarian Mission

U.S. Army Sgt. Jason Smith, a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team, talks with a group of Afghan children during an Afghan-led clearing operation on April 28, 2012, in the Ghazni province of Afghanistan. (Photo by U.S. Army Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod)

U.S. Army Medical Logistics Command was awarded a meritorious unit citation for supporting missions in and following the military’s withdrawal from Afghanistan. AMLC’s role in the largest evacuation of noncombatants in U.S. military history included support to U.S. coalition and contractor personnel, as well as thousands of Afghans following two ...

Article
May 1, 2023

Enhanced Mpox Outbreak Case Detection Among MHS Beneficiaries Through Use of ESSENCE (Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics)

A colorized scanning electron microscopic image of the mpox virus on the surface of infected VERO E6 cells

This report describes how ESSENCE, which collects near real-time biosurveillance data globally on U.S. military personnel, monitored the mpox outbreak in 2002 and assesses its detection of confirmed/probable cases among MHS beneficiaries. ESSENCE systematically queries millions of health encounters to detect records of potential public health ...

Article
May 1, 2023

Increasing Incidence Rates of Eosinophilic Esophagitis in Active Component Service Members, U.S. Armed Forces, 2009–2021

A respiratory therapist visualizes the vocal chords of a patient using an endoscopy tool

This study examines the incidence of eosinophilic esophagitis among the active component of the U.S. Armed Forces from 2009 to 2021. Reported prevalence has been increasing worldwide, with a recent meta-analysis estimating 34.2 cases per 100,000 persons.

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: January 05, 2024
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery