A Public Health Expert Weighs in on That Controversial NYTimes Thanksgiving Column

‘We aren’t really in a bubble — we are in a web’

Caredwen Foley
Elemental

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Credit: Tetra Images / Getty Images

This Thanksgiving, many people are making difficult sacrifices. For frontline health care workers, this means long shifts away from loved ones, caring for critically ill people struggling against a deadly illness. For others, it means skipping traditional holiday festivities in favor of quiet celebrations at home.

In a New York Times opinion piece on November 20, Farhad Manjoo discussed his approach to weighing the risks and benefits of traveling for Thanksgiving with his family, ultimately deciding to travel to see loved ones. Manjoo immediately came in for an onslaught of criticism from medical and public health professionals and members of the media. And Manjoo is far from an isolated case: Tens of millions of Americans are still expected to travel for the holidays, and airports are already getting busier with a flood of Thanksgiving travelers.

The BU Covid Corps have been evaluating and providing feedback on people’s pandemic decision-making for Elemental’s COVID Diary Audit Series. So Caredwen Foley, a graduate student in the graduate program, and Eleanor Murray, ScD, an assistant professor, at Boston University School of Public Health, wanted to take a look at Manjoo’s…

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Caredwen Foley
Elemental

Grad student in Environmental Health at BUSPH. Toxicology, epidemiology, risk assessment, communications. My job is to help you stay safe. @EpiCovidCorps