Achmad Shiva’ul Haq Asjach
Scholar ID, Sinta ID, Scopus ID, WoS ID
The Coronavirus
Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has become one of the most significant public
health crises in modern history, producing multidimensional impacts on society,
including health, economic, social, and legal dimensions. The pandemic not only
tested the capacity of the national healthcare system but also examined the
readiness of the state’s legal framework and policy mechanisms in responding to
a public health emergency. In the Indonesian context, the COVID-19 pandemic
demonstrated that health law plays a strategic role as an instrument of
regulation, protection, control, and enforcement of public health policies to
ensure the safety of the population at large.
From a
constitutional perspective, the state has an obligation to protect the public’s
right to health, as affirmed in Article 28H paragraph (1) of the 1945
Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia, which stipulates that every person
is entitled to access healthcare services. Furthermore, Article 34 paragraph
(3) of the Constitution also provides that the state is responsible for
providing adequate healthcare facilities and public service infrastructure.
Based on these provisions, the state is legally authorized to take
extraordinary measures in responding to epidemics and pandemics in order to
safeguard public welfare and safety.
In handling the
COVID-19 pandemic, the Government of Indonesia employed various legal
instruments as the basis for its public health crisis response policies. One of
the key regulations is Law Number 6 of 2018 concerning Health Quarantine, which
provides the legal foundation for the government to implement regional
quarantine, large-scale social restrictions (PSBB), home quarantine, hospital
quarantine, and other public health emergency measures. In addition, the
government issued Presidential Decree Number 11 of 2020 on the Declaration of
COVID-19 as a Public Health Emergency and Presidential Decree Number 12 of 2020
on the Designation of the Non-Natural Disaster of COVID-19 Outbreak as a
National Disaster.
This legal
framework served as the basis for various public health policies, including
restrictions on public mobility, the implementation of PSBB, the enforcement of
community activity restrictions (PPKM), mandatory mask-wearing, mass
vaccination programs, international travel controls, and the digitalization of
public health tracking systems. From a health law perspective, these policies
reflect the application of the principle of salus populi suprema lex esto,
meaning that the safety of the people is the highest law.
Nevertheless,
the implementation of health policies during the pandemic also gave rise to
various complex legal challenges. One of the main challenges was the
restriction of human rights resulting from policies limiting social interaction
and public mobility. PSBB and PPKM policies essentially restricted people’s
rights to move freely, assemble, work, worship, and carry out economic
activities. From a human rights perspective, such restrictions generated
debates regarding the balance between public health protection and the
safeguarding of civil liberties.
In principle,
the restriction of human rights is permissible in a public health emergency,
provided that it is conducted in accordance with the law, is proportionate,
pursues a legitimate aim, and is implemented for the protection of the public
interest. However, in practice, several social restriction policies created
legal uncertainty due to rapidly changing regulations, inconsistencies between
central and regional policies, and weak supervision over policy implementation
on the ground. These conditions indicate that regulatory harmonization and
inter-agency coordination remain major challenges within the national health
law system.
The next legal
challenge concerns the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. The national
vaccination program was one of the government’s strategic policies to establish
herd immunity and reduce transmission rates. However, the implementation of
vaccination also gave rise to several legal issues, such as vaccine
distribution inequality, prioritization of vaccine recipients, mandatory
vaccination policies, and the state’s liability for vaccine-related adverse
effects.
In several
instances, debates emerged regarding mandatory vaccination, which was perceived
as limiting an individual’s right to determine medical treatment for
themselves. On the other hand, the state argued that vaccination is part of
public health protection; therefore, collective interests must take precedence
over individual interests. This issue reflects the ongoing tension between the
principle of individual autonomy and the interests of public health within
health law.
In addition,
pandemic management also raised serious issues concerning the protection of
public health data. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the government utilized
various digital applications for contact tracing, vaccination certificates, and
monitoring public mobility. While the use of such digital technologies
supported pandemic control efforts, it also created risks of privacy violations
and misuse of sensitive health data.
Health data is
classified as sensitive personal data; therefore, its use must be subject to
strict legal protection. However, during the pandemic, Indonesia’s regulatory
framework on personal data protection was still not fully developed, leading to
concerns regarding the security of citizens’ data. Consequently, the enactment
of Law Number 27 of 2022 concerning Personal Data Protection marked an
important step in strengthening legal safeguards for public health data in the
digital era.
The COVID-19
pandemic also revealed issues of inequality in access to healthcare services
between urban areas and remote regions. Limitations in healthcare facilities,
medical personnel, medical equipment, and hospital capacity resulted in uneven
pandemic response across Indonesia. This condition indicates that the national
health system still faces structural problems that require comprehensive
reform.
From a critical
perspective, the COVID-19 pandemic provides an important lesson that the
national health law framework must become more adaptive, responsive, and
integrated in addressing future public health emergencies. One of the main
weaknesses during the pandemic was the overlap of regulations and the
frequently changing government policies, which created public confusion. In
addition, coordination between central and regional governments in implementing
health policies was still not optimal.
Based on these
conditions, comprehensive health law reform is required to strengthen the
crisis response system for future public health emergencies. First,
harmonization of emergency health regulations is necessary to prevent normative
overlaps between central and regional governments. Regulations on epidemic
management should be designed in a more systematic manner and accompanied by
clear implementation mechanisms.
Second, it is
necessary to strengthen the protection of human rights in public health
emergency policies. Any restriction on public rights must be carried out based
on the principles of legality, proportionality, accountability, and
transparency in order to prevent abuse of power.
Third, legal
reform should be directed toward strengthening the protection of public health
data, particularly in the use of digital health technologies. The state must
ensure that health data is processed securely, within limited scope, and solely
for the purpose of public health response.
Fourth, it is
necessary to strengthen the legal framework governing the distribution of
vaccines and medicines to ensure equitable access to healthcare for all
citizens. The state must establish legal mechanisms that guarantee fair and
non-discriminatory distribution of vaccines.
Fifth, it is
essential to strengthen the national health system through capacity building of
hospitals, healthcare workers, health laboratories, and epidemiological
surveillance systems. Health law reform should not be limited to regulatory
aspects alone but must also be accompanied by institutional strengthening and
healthcare infrastructure development.
Thus, the
COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates that health law plays a highly significant role
in managing public health crises. Law functions not only as an instrument of
social control but also as a mechanism for protecting public rights and
ensuring legal certainty in state policies. Therefore, adaptive, just, and
human rights–oriented health law reform is an urgent necessity to ensure that
Indonesia is better prepared to face future outbreaks and pandemics.
References
Constitution of
the Republic of Indonesia of 1945.
Law of the
Republic of Indonesia Number 6 of 2018 concerning Health Quarantine.
Law of the
Republic of Indonesia Number 17 of 2023 concerning Health.
Law of the
Republic of Indonesia Number 27 of 2022 concerning Personal Data Protection.
Presidential
Decree Number 11 of 2020 concerning the Declaration of COVID-19 as a Public
Health Emergency.
Presidential
Decree Number 12 of 2020 concerning the Designation of the Non-Natural Disaster
of COVID-19 Outbreak as a National Disaster.
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(2021). Pengantar ilmu hukum. Kencana.
Nasution, B. J.
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Soekanto, S.
(1990). Segi-segi hukum hak dan kewajiban pasien dalam kerangka hukum
kesehatan. Mandar Maju.



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