During the COVID-19 pandemic, state governments enacted policies that profoundly affected personal and public life. These policies involved difficult trade-offs between individual freedoms, economic interests, public health, and other values.
We sought to understand how these difficult and sometimes high-stakes policy decisions were made, by interviewing people closely involved in state-level COVID-19 responses, including governors’ chiefs of staff, communication directors, advisors to governors, state health department leadership, state epidemiologists, and health information officers, as well as people from outside of government who served on COVID-19 task forces. We interviewed 67 people from 30 states who were involved in a state-level COVID-19 response.
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Greenwall Foundation.