AIDS and the Law: Setting and Evaluating Threshold Standards for Coercive Public Health Intervention

73 Pages Posted: 16 Mar 2010

See all articles by Eric S. Janus

Eric S. Janus

Mitchell Hamline School of Law

Date Written: 1988

Abstract

This article examines in detail an example of legislation that redefines the scope of permissible public health intervention and provides procedural protections compatible with modern precedent – the Minnesota Health Threat Procedures Act. This Act is an appropriate subject for close study because it is intended to be responsive to the general concerns raised by the commentators: the narrowing redefinition of the scope of coercive public health intervention and the addition of suitable procedural protections. Coercive public health legislation merits close attention because it inevitably invokes a clash of three important values. The purpose of the legislation is the protection of the public's health. This end, when implemented through coercive means, conflicts necessarily with the liberty and autonomy of individuals. As a by-product, the legislation may produce injustice in the form of discrimination against and stigmatization of individuals who are infected with HIV or afflicted with AIDS.

Keywords: HIV, Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Public Health Law, Quarantine, Minnesota Quarantine, Last Resort Principle

Suggested Citation

Janus, Eric S., AIDS and the Law: Setting and Evaluating Threshold Standards for Coercive Public Health Intervention (1988). William Mitchell Law Review, Vol. 14, 1988, William Mitchell Legal Studies Research Paper No. 1988-04, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1569791

Eric S. Janus (Contact Author)

Mitchell Hamline School of Law ( email )

875 Summit Ave
St. Paul, MN Minnesota 55105-3076
United States
6126954928 (Phone)
6126954928 (Fax)

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