As has been said, inside a string literal, a backslash indicates an escape sequence, rather than a literal backslash character, but the RegExp constructor often needs literal backslash characters in the string passed to it, so the code should have \\s to represent a literal backslash, in most cases.
A problem is that double-escaping metacharacters is tedious. There is one way to pass a string to new RegExp without having to double escape them: use the String.raw template tag, an ES6 feature, which allows you to write a string that will be parsed by the interpreter verbatim, without any parsing of escape sequences. For example:
console.log('\\'.length);           // length 1: an escaped backslash
console.log(`\\`.length);           // length 1: an escaped backslash
console.log(String.raw`\\`.length); // length 2: no escaping in String.raw!
 
 
So, if you wish to keep your code readable, and you have many backslashes, you may use String.raw to type only one backslash, when the pattern requires a backslash:
const sentence = 'foo bar baz';
const regex = new RegExp(String.raw`\bfoo\sbar\sbaz\b`);
console.log(regex.test(sentence));
 
 
But there's a better option. Generally, there's not much good reason to use new RegExp unless you need to dynamically create a regular expression from existing variables. Otherwise, you should use regex literals instead, which do not require double-escaping of metacharacters, and do not require writing out String.raw to keep the pattern readable:
const sentence = 'foo bar baz';
const regex = /\bfoo\sbar\sbaz\b/;
console.log(regex.test(sentence));
 
 
Best to only use new RegExp when the pattern must be created on-the-fly, like in the following snippet:
const sentence = 'foo bar baz';
const wordToFind = 'foo'; // from user input
const regex = new RegExp(String.raw`\b${wordToFind}\b`);
console.log(regex.test(sentence));