Historical legal and epidemiologic lessons for governing quarantine and isolation in public health practice
摘要
Quarantine and isolation remain central public health measures during outbreaks, but their effectiveness and social consequences vary across diseases, jurisdictions, and implementation settings.
ObjectiveTo examine how governance conditions shape the effectiveness, acceptability, and secondary harms of quarantine and isolation across historical and contemporary settings.
MethodsThis structured narrative review synthesized historical scholarship, legal authorities, public health ethics literature, and selected epidemiologic and policy studies. Sources were identified iteratively and analyzed thematically.
ResultsAcross the reviewed literature, quarantine and isolation were most coherent when aligned with pathogen biology, grounded in a clear legal basis, implemented in workable settings, reassessed as evidence changed, and supported by equitable, non-stigmatizing communication. Six recurring domains structured the synthesis: pathogen biology and concepts of contagion, authority and justification, venue and implementation context, proportionality and duration, equity and differential burden, and risk communication. Historical and contemporary sources suggested that poorly aligned restrictions were more likely to generate resistance, unequal burden, and psychological harm.
ConclusionsQuarantine and isolation are best understood as governance practices as well as epidemiologic interventions. Their performance depends not only on disease characteristics but also on how authority is exercised, where burdens fall, how long restrictions persist, and how clearly their rationale is communicated.