Ebola screening measures rest on federal law
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration's plans to screen certain airline passengers for exposure to Ebola are based on the Constitution and long-established legal authority that would almost certainly stand up in court if challenged, public health experts say.
Airline passengers arriving from three West African countries — Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea — will face temperature checks using no-touch thermometers and other screening measures at five U.S. airports, starting with New York's Kennedy International on Saturday. The measures, aimed at identifying sickly passengers from countries experiencing the Ebola outbreak, will expand over the next week to Newark Liberty, Washington Dulles, Chicago's O'Hare and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta international airports.
Though airline passengers may find it intrusive to have their temperature taken, the government has wide power when it comes to public health and border control, experts say, including quarantine and isolation. Courts would almost certainly defer to the judgment of public health professionals in the event someone tried to sue over what they saw as a civil liberties intrusion.
"You are subject to an entrance screening per the laws of the land," said Rebecca Katz, an associate professor of health policy at George Washington University. It's hard to force an invasive procedure on someone, but public health authorities do have the legal right, she added.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cite as legal authority the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, under which the government regulates trade with foreign countries. The 1944 Public Health Service Act also allows the federal government to take action to prevent communicable diseases from spreading into the country.
A U.S. citizen who presents a heightened risk of disease upon arrival in the United States has a legal right to re-enter the country and be safely quarantined, said Lawrence Gostin, a public health law expert at Georgetown University. That same guarantee would not apply to non-U.S. citizens, but as a practical matter, giving them immediate care might be safer than turning them away and putting them on a plane back home.
The list of diseases for which quarantine is authorized by law includes cholera, smallpox, plague and viral hemorrhagic fever, which includes Ebola. It can be extended to include other illnesses, as has occurred in the past decade with presidential executive orders authorizing quarantines to deal with potential outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and later, bird flu.
The CDC has said it issues a few isolation orders a year — which separates sick people from those who aren't ill — and usually for individuals arriving from other countries with infectious tuberculosis. A federal quarantine, which separates people exposed to a communicable disease but who aren't showing symptoms, is very rarely used.
"There's very little in the way of strong limits" against issuing the orders, except for the advice and best judgment of government public health experts, said Wendy Mariner, a Boston University health law professor, who said she was unconvinced about the effectiveness of the screening protocols given the potential for false positives.
"When we're thinking of these issues, we use them as a prevention measure of last resort," Mariner said. "And that's because they would only be useful in a situation where there is a very dreadful disease that is very easily transmitted and for which we have no vaccine or treatment."
Gostin said this was the first time he was aware of that the United States has done fever monitoring of this sort, though it has been done in other countries.
Still, there's no question that the airport screening taps into a broader debate about balancing the government's authority to protect public health against the obligation to uphold civil liberties — especially if the measures were made more intrusive, such as drawing blood.
Peter Jacobson, a University of Michigan professor of health law and policy, said that though he believed the screening measures were justified, it was imperative that the right to challenge quarantine or isolation orders in court be maintained.
"You need to assume that regardless of the ability to challenge, the courts are going to defer to the public health experts," Jacobson said. "If CDC experts testify that an individual is infected with Ebola. ... I can't imagine a court overturning a CDC quarantine or isolation."
Plus, he added, "It'd be hard to see taking someone's temperature as particularly intrusive if it is — as is certainly the case with Ebola — part of treating the disease."
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