This website is no longer updated

The Swiss National COVID-19 Science Task Force was dissolved on 31 March 2022.

It has been replaced by the Scientific Advisory Panel to ensure that the cantons and the Confederation can continue to benefit from scientific expertise in the context of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.

This website is therefore no longer updated, but its content remains accessible as an archive.

9 May 2020 – Policy Brief

Social, legal, and ethical issues of Test-trace-isolate-quarantine strategies

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The Scientific task force was tasked with refining aspects of possible transition strategies. In complement to the “SARS-CoV-2 Contact tracing strategy: epidemiological and strategic considerations», the Ethical, legal, and social group explored ELSI aspects of Test-trace-isolate-quarantine strategies.

Executive summary

Together with testing, analog contact tracing, and digital contact tracing, protection of those in isolation and quarantine – legally, socially, and economically – is an essential component of the Test-trace-isolate-quarantine (TTIQ). Without this fourth pillar, the other three will not function. A TTIQ strategy requires altruism, which should be facilitated and recognized. It also requires great clarity on who pays for testing, contact tracing, isolation, and quarantine, what happens to those identified as ill or as contacts, the reasons for policy choices including the trade-offs involved and why chosen policies fulfill the subsidiarity requirement, and the status of digital proximity tracing. Cooperation with the strategy must be made easy for populations with very different pressures and needs; its success therefore depends on our ability to clarify relevant information to all of these populations, and to make cooperation feasible for all of them as well.

Date of request: 
Date of response: 9/5/2020

In response to request from:

Comment on planned updates: 

Expert groups and individuals involved: Ethical, legal, social issues

Contact persons: samia.hurst@unige.ch

This website is no longer updated

The Swiss National COVID-19 Science Task Force was dissolved on 31 March 2022.

It has been replaced by the Scientific Advisory Panel to ensure that the cantons and the Confederation can continue to benefit from scientific expertise in the context of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.

This website is therefore no longer updated, but its content remains accessible as an archive.