As COVID-19 triggers survival instinct, unwise decisions can result
MONTREAL — When a Quebec couple recently travelled to the far reaches of Yukon in a bid to escape the novel coronavirus, only to be turned away, it seemed a textbook case of pandemic-generated panic.
But while it was an extreme example, experts say the daily assault of information about COVID-19 can distort people’s estimation of the risk the virus poses to them, which leads to both good and bad behaviour.
Dana Tizya-Tramm chief of the Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation in Old Crow, Yukon, told The Canadian Press that when the Quebec couple got off the plane March 27, they displayed a “palpable” fear of the pandemic.
He said he told the couple, whom he didn’t identify, that Old Crow couldn’t shelter newcomers who might spread the virus among its 250 residents — and then he sent them packing.