Skip to content
Surprising Science

Containing Ebola Hysteria Will Be Tougher than Containing Ebola (and You Can Help)

Now that another Texas healthcare worker has contracted Ebola, and was allowed to fly commercial airlines before the diagnosis was made, health officials risk losing the public’s trust. 
Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people

Now that another Texas healthcare worker has contracted Ebola, and was allowed to fly commercial airlines before the diagnosis was made, health officials risk losing the public’s trust. Psychologists say this is particularly dangerous since the threat of hysteria over Ebola is potentially much more threatening than the disease itself. 


“‘Officials will have to be very, very careful,’ said Paul Slovic, president of Decision Research, a nonprofit that studies public health and perceptions of threat. ‘Once trust starts to erode, the next time they tell you not to worry — you worry.'”

While the flu will sometimes kill upward of 30,000 people per year in the United States, which a simple flu shot could help alleviate, media attention has already focussed a great deal on the threat of Ebola, which remains near zero for all Americans. Still, when humans assess risk, they do so by balancing rational deduction with their emotional reaction. For reasons that have to do with biological evolution, the latter often trumps the former. 

When it comes to risk assessment, author Eric Schlosser explains our unique calculations with respect to nuclear weapons:

Read more at the New York Times

Photo credit: Shutterstock

Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people

Related
Ebola is starting to pose a serious risk to public health in America. But the threat is not the disease itself. The real danger is a growing epidemic of fear, an infection that spreads much more readily than the virus, is far harder to treat, and which threatens to cause much more sickness and death. The longer this epidemic of fear persists, the greater the likelihood that fear of Ebola in the United States will harm public health far more than the deadly hemorrhagic virus itself.

Up Next