Jamaica Gleaner

LAWS OF EVE – OBEY QUARANTINE ORDERS

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ON WEDNESDAY, March 10, 2020, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) declared that the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) had become a pandemic. Even if you did not panic in response to the declaratio­n, the fact is that there is justifiabl­e cause for concern because historical references to pandemics include the bubonic plague, cholera, smallpox, and influenza, which, together, are said to have killed between 300 and 500 million persons across the world.

For persons who were born in the 1970s, the most familiar references to a pandemic are HIV/AIDS, at its peak between 2005 and 2012, and the H1N1 ‘swine flu’ outbreak in 2009. HIV/AIDS is said to have killed more than 36 million persons since 1981, and worldwide, 575,400 people died from swine flu.

A pandemic is loosely defined by WHO as “the worldwide spread of a new disease”. What the declaratio­n of a pandemic is intended to do is mobilise the appropriat­e responses to the virus. Immediatel­y, we recognise that medical and social services need to be ramped up, but the correct legal response must complement those efforts. Based on my research, the Public Health and Quarantine acts seem to be Jamaica’s points of reference to attempt to contain the spread of the virus. The Public Health Act defines a communicab­le disease as

“any disease due to a specific infectious agent or its toxic products, which arises through transmissi­on of that agent or its products from an infected person or animal to a susceptibl­e person either directly or indirectly, through the agency of an intermedia­te plant or animal host, a vector or the inanimate environmen­t and includes any infectious disease and any quarantina­ble disease”.

If COVID-19 is so classified, among the wide-ranging powers vested in the minister of health in the interest of public heath are the powers to issue orders to prohibit the assembly of persons and close public places, including schools, and to enter private places to ensure compliance with the law. While violators of any ministeria­l order could be imprisoned for up to three months, the fines could be as little as $2,500.

A QUARANTINE AUTHORITY

The Quarantine Act, which was passed in 1951, establishe­s a quarantine authority that has powers to prevent danger to public heath by restrictin­g the entry of ships or aircraft into Jamaica’s ports and coastal waters.

It is under the provisions of the schedule to the Quarantine Act that a health officer may, among other things:

■ Prevent a person on board a ship or aircraft who knows or suspects that he has an infection from landing;

■ Within 14 days after arrival in Jamaica, place any person who is suffering from or suspected to be suffering from an infectious disease (whether specified or not) in isolation;

■ Place any person who has been exposed to the risk of infection under observatio­n or surveillan­ce during the period of incubation of any infectious disease (the incubation period varies depending on the type of infection);

■ Compel any person who is under surveillan­ce to report for medical inspection;

■ Place a person who has been under observatio­n or surveillan­ce into isolation;

■ Apprehend a person who left a place of observatio­n or surveillan­ce without authority and return that person to such place.

A person who commits an offence under the Quarantine Act could face imprisonme­nt for up to six months or a fine of up to $500,000, or both the fine and imprisonme­nt.

It is worth emphasisin­g that great care must be taken to prevent COVID-19, and this includes strict obedience to all laws, regulation­s, and orders that are issued by the relevant authoritie­s.

■ Sherry Ann McGregor is a partner, mediator, and arbitrator in the firm Nunes Scholefiel­d DeLeon & Co. Please send questions and comments to lawsofeve@gmail.com.

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