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Law panel flags ‘significant deficiencies’ in Epidemic Diseases Act, calls for calls for its overhaul

Epidemic Diseases Act
The Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897, as amended, provides two types of penalties. First is in respect to contravention of any provision, order or rule made under the Act, which is punishable under Section 188 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860.

Flagging “significant deficiencies” in the Epidemic Diseases Act, the the Law Commission has recommended to the government that either the law be suitably amended to address existing gaps or a comprehensive legislation be brought in to effectively deal with future epidemics.

Flagging “significant deficiencies” in the Epidemic Diseases Act, the the Law Commission has recommended to the government that either the law be suitably amended to address existing gaps or a comprehensive legislation be brought in to effectively deal with future epidemics.  The panel headed by Justice (retired) Ritu Raj Awasthi has submitted its report to the government, calling for for an exhaustive overhaul of the law.

In his cover note to Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal, Justice Awasthi noted that the COVID-19 pandemic unleashed an unprecedented challenge for the Indian health infrastructure.

  • “In the course of dealing with this crisis, certain limitations in the legal framework relating to health were realised. While the government was quick to respond to the emerging situation, it was felt that a more comprehensive law could have enabled a better response to the crisis,” he said.
  • The Law Commission, he said, holds the view that the existing legislation exhibits “significant deficiencies” in addressing the containment and management of future epidemics in the country as new infectious diseases or novel strains of existing pathogens may emerge.
  • The immediate response to COVID-19 such as the imposition of a lockdown was invoked under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, he recalled.
  • In light of the immediate challenges, especially those faced by the healthcare workers, Parliament amended the Epidemic Diseases Act of 1897 in 2020.
  • In its report, the law panel said that there is an “ardent need for comprehensive legislation” to deal with epidemics that provide for a coordinated response in the unforeseen event.
  • Considering the modern scientific advancements, the new or the amended Act should not only give the government mere stipulated powers “rather it should shape appropriate response mechanisms in preventing and controlling epidemic diseases,” it said.
  • The amended law or a new one must include a clear definition of an ‘epidemic’.
  • The Epidemic Diseases Act should appropriately decentralise and demarcate the power between central, state and local authorities to regulate an unfolding epidemic crisis, it said.
  • The law panel also suggested a flexible enforcement mechanism is required for prevention, control and management of epidemic diseases as per the stage of the spread of infectious or contagious disease.
  • Proposing an ‘Epidemic Plan’ at the central level, it said the strategy should identify the nodal institutes and authorities which shall hold the primary responsibility of research and development of vaccines and other necessary drugs.
  • The government should also develop a mechanism to coordinate between public and private medical research institutes, vaccine production companies and raw material suppliers so as to effectively manage the chain of vaccine research and its production.
  • Such a broad framework will not only help the government, vaccine manufacturing companies and vaccine suppliers during the epidemic to have a concerted approach but will also be prolific for utilising a pool of resources from both public and private sector, it underlined.
  • Referring to enhanced penalty provisions, it noted that currently, the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897, as amended, provides two types of penalties. First is in respect to contravention of any provision, order or rule made under the Act, which is punishable under Section 188 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860.

Source: Economic Times

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