Influencer and parenting blogger Naomi Davis is being criticized on social media for choosing to leave New York City and “drive out west” in an RV with her family, despite calls for New York City residents to self-quarantine to prevent the spread of COVID-19, according to BuzzFeed News.

Davis, who is a native of Utah but currently lives in New York City, blogs at Love Taza, where she shares parenting tips, recipes and details of her life with her husband and five children.

On Saturday, Davis shared with her nearly 500,000 Instagram followers that “after two full weeks in the apartment” her family would be traveling “west” in an RV to leave New York City.

Almost immediately, many of her followers began to express concern and frustration that her family was choosing to leave the city, which has become a hotbed of the coronavirus, according to BuzzFeed.

Davis wrote that the family left New York on Friday.

On Saturday, a domestic travel advisory was put in place for New York, New Jersey and Connecticut which asked residents to “to refrain from non-essential domestic travel for 14 days effective immediately,” BuzzFeed reported.

“I’m so scared that this decision will influence your followers to do the same,” one follower commented on Davis’ Instagram post, according to Vanity Fair.

The debate has also moved to Twitter, where many people have shared their thoughts on Davis’ decision.

“This kind of behaviour is exactly what fanned the flames of the pandemic in Italy,” wrote one Twitter user. “I can only imagine what it must be like to try to contain 5 kids in an apartment but this is a pretty thoughtless decision.”

@lovetaza this kind of behaviour is exactly what fanned the flames of the pandemic in Italy. I can only imagine what it must be like to try to contain 5 kids in an apartment but this is a pretty thoughtless decision. — Tamara Hinz (@hinz_tamara) March 31, 2020

“This is specifically what people are asked NOT to do and they’re doing it,” one person tweeted.

“You did what was best for your family. How nice for you,” another Twitter user wrote. “You did not do what was best for your neighbors, community, state or nation.”

@lovetaza You did what was best for your family. How nice for you. You did not do what was best for your neighbors, community, state, or nation. How very selfish & shortsighted. #COVID19 #YouAreTheSpread #FlattenTheCurve — Amy J Cortez (@JanelCortez) March 31, 2020

Others on Twitter expressed concern about the health of family members in communities to which Davis is planning to travel.

A woman on Instagram with nearly 500k followers posted about leaving NYC today with her family in an rv as a way to “responsibly” ignore all scientific and government advice! Because she has househead! And she’s going to Utah! Where my type 1 diabetic SiL lives. pic.twitter.com/I6EgLNKqQo — Meg Conley (@_megconley) March 29, 2020

Davis is not the only New Yorker to leave the city in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

“A backlash has grown on the outskirts of the New York region as wealthy people flee to summer homes to avoid the densely packed city, which has become the epicenter of the coronavirus crisis,” The New York Times reported last week.

For example, the population of Southampton has gone from 60,000 to 100,000 in just a few weeks as wealthy New Yorkers leave the city for vacation homes, according to Forbes.

Full-time residents of beach towns have expressed frustration with the newcomers, with some local government officials asking the travelers to stay away for now, according to the Times.

“We all love the summer people,” Joseph Mancini, the mayor of Long Beach Township in New Jersey, told the Times. “They drive our economy. But when they come down here now, the services here aren’t geared up for them.”

Dr. Drew Harris, a population health researcher and assistant professor at Thomas Jefferson University who spoke to BuzzFeed about Davis’ decision to leave New York City, said that the public has a responsibility to the people around them to do whatever they can to contain the spread of the virus.

“This is no different than when the rich left the cities to the poor folks during the plague,” Harris told BuzzFeed. “We need to remember we’re all in this together and promote policies that protect everyone.”

Davis has since responded to the backlash through Instagram Stories, as well as a comment on her original Instagram post.

“I don’t know if it helps, but I am trying to do my best,” Davis wrote in a comment on Instagram on Monday. “Just know that I was trying to be careful and trying to take care of my kids and my family. And I am going to keep taking this seriously and am going to keep trying to be careful in the coming days and months.”