Hajdu brings anthropology, public health experience to COVID-19 fight
OTTAWA — Patty Hajdu “fell in love” with cultural anthropology at university.
Now, as Canada’s federal health minister in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, she’s playing a leading role in an existential battle against a virus that promises to change the course of human societies around the globe — the very thing cultural anthropologists spend their lives studying.
“There’s a piece of me that’s still an anthropologist at heart, if you will,” Hajdu said in an interview.
As she almost daily urges Canadians to hole up at home and keep physical distance between one another, the anthropologist in Hajdu can’t help wondering: “How is this going to change the way that we relate to each other as humans? And this is global so how is it going to change the way the human species interacts with each other?”