In the Case of an Outbreak of Pandemic Flu, Large
Majority of Americans Willing to Make Major Changes in Their Lives
Survey Also Finds Many People Would Face Critical Work-Related Problems
For immediate release: Thursday, October 26, 2006
Boston,
MA -- The latest national survey
conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Project on the
Public and Biological Security finds that when faced with a serious
outbreak of pandemic flu, a large majority of Americans are willing to make
major changes in their lives and cooperate with public health officials'
recommendations.
However, the survey also finds that a substantial
share of Americans would have no one to care for them if they become ill or
would face serious financial problems if they had to stay home from work for a
week or more.
To view the complete survey and Power Point slides
see: http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/panflu/IOM_Avian_flu.ppt
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/panflu/panflu_charts.ppt
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/panflu/panflu_release_topline.doc
Pandemic flu is a term used to describe a virulent
human flu that causes a global outbreak, or pandemic, of serious illness.
Because there is little natural immunity, the disease can spread easily from
person to person. Currently, there is no pandemic flu, but health officials are
concerned that the H5N1 avian flu which has caused about 250 illnesses and
deaths among people in Asia, Africa, and Europe
could become a pandemic flu. No humans or poultry in the Americas have
been infected with this avian flu virus.
This HSPH survey was conducted to help public
health officials in planning for a possible outbreak of pandemic flu and will
be presented Thursday, Oct. 26 in Washington, D.C. at an Institute
of Medicine workshop:
Modeling Community Containment for Pandemic Influenza. HSPH Professor Marc Lipsitch will also be presenting historical analyses of
interventions in the 1918 pandemic, comparing cities that intervened early and
those that intervened late, to assess the difference in epidemic curves in
these groups of cities.
This is the first report to attempt to tap the
public's intentions when faced with the specific circumstances of an outbreak.
The people interviewed were first read a scenario* about an outbreak of flu
that spreads rapidly among humans and causes severe illness. They were then
asked how they would respond to and be affected by the circumstances that would
arise from such an outbreak.
Willingness to Cooperate with Public Health
Recommendations
More than three-fourths of Americans say they would cooperate if
public health officials recommended that for one month they curtail various
activities of their daily lives, such as using public transportation, going to
the mall, and going to church (Figure 1). More than nine in ten (94%) say they
would stay at home away from other people for seven to ten days if they had
pandemic flu (Figure 2). In addition, 85% say they and all members of their
household would stay at home for that period if another member of their
household was sick.
Nine in ten Americans (90%) say that if public
health officials recommended that they and the other members of their household
stay in their town or city, they were likely to stay.
These findings speak to the resilience of the
American public in the face of a potential health crisis, said Robert J. Blendon, Professor of Health Policy and Political Analysis
at the Harvard School of Public Health.
The area where anticipated cooperation is lowest
involved the workplace. While a majority (57%) of employed adults say they would
stay home from work if public officials said they should, even if their
employers told them to come to work, about one-third (35%) say they would go to
work.
Home
More than eight in ten Americans (85%) say they would be able to take care of
sick household members at home for 7 to 10 days, if public health officials
recommended it (Figure 2). However, about three-fourths (76%) say they would be
worried that if they stayed at home with a household member who was sick from
pandemic flu, they themselves would get sick from the disease.
Nearly three-fourths (73%) say they would have
someone to take care of them at home if they became sick with pandemic flu and
had to remain at home for seven to ten days. However, about one in four (24%)
say they would not have someone to take care of them. More than four in ten people
living in one-adult households (45%) and about one third of low-income (36%),
African-American (34%), disabled (33%), and chronically ill (32%) adults say
they would not have anyone to take care of them if they were sick and had to
remain at home that long.
A substantial proportion of the public believes
that they or a household member would be likely to experience various problems,
such as losing pay, being unable to get the health care or prescription drugs
they need, or being unable to get care for an older or disabled person, if they
stayed at home for seven to ten days and avoided contact with anyone outside
their household (Figure 3).
School Closings
If schools and daycare were closed for one month, 93% of adults who have major
responsibility for children under age 5 in daycare or age 5 to 17 and have at
least one employed adult in the household think they would be able to arrange
care so that at least one employed adult in the household could go to work.
Almost as many (86%) would be able to do so if schools were closed for three
months (Figure 4). However, six in ten (60%) say that at least one employed
person would have to stay home if schools were closed for a month.
Only one-fourth (25%) of employed people who have
major responsibility for children under age 5 in daycare or age 5-17 in their
household say that if schools and daycare closed for one month, they would be
able to work from home and take care of the children.
More than nine in ten (95%) adults with major
responsibility for children age 5 to 17 report that
they would be willing to give school lessons at home if schools were closed for
three months.
More than eight in ten (85%) of these adults also
think that if schools were closed for three months and public health officials
recommended it, they would be able to keep their children and teenagers from
taking public transportation, going to public events, and gathering outside
home while schools were closed.
"A surprisingly large number of people would
be able to keep their children home and away from others if schools closed
during a severe pandemic," said Blendon.
About six in ten (64%) of these adults would need
only a little or no help at all in order to deal with the problems of having to
stay home and keep children at home for a long period of time. Of those who say
they would need a lot or some help, half (50%) would rely most on help from
family, 11% on friends or neighbors, and 34% on outside agencies.
Work
The survey asked employed Americans about the problems they might have
if they were asked to stay out of work for seven to ten days, a month, and
three months because of an outbreak of pandemic flu in their community.
The longer people are out of work, the greater the
number of people who will face financial problems. While most employed people
(74%) believe they could miss seven to ten days of work without having serious
financial problems, one in four (25%) said they would face such problems. A
majority (57%) think they would have serious financial problems if they had to
miss work for one month, and a total of three-fourths (76%) think they would
have such problems if they were away from work for three months (Figure 5).
Only about three in ten (29%) say that if they had
to stay away from the workplace for one month, they would be able to work from
home for that long.
Employed Americans were also asked about their
current employers plans and policies for dealing with
an outbreak of pandemic flu. Few working people (19%) are aware of any plan at
their workplace to respond to a serious outbreak of pandemic flu. About one in
five employed adults (22%) are very or somewhat worried that their employer
would make them go to work even if they were sick. Half (50%) believe that
their workplace would stay open if public health officials recommended that
some businesses in their community should shut down. Only about one-third (35%)
of employed Americans think that if they stayed home from work, they would
still get paid; 42% think they would not get paid, and 22% do not know whether
they would get paid or not.
"These findings are a wake-up call for
business, that employees have serious financial concerns and are unclear about
the workplace plans and policies for dealing with pandemic flu," said Blendon.
*scenario read to
interviewees: "Now I want to ask you some questions about
a possible outbreak in the U.S. of pandemic flu, a new type of flu that spreads
rapidly among humans and causes severe illness. Currently there have not been
any cases of pandemic flu in the U.S. However, imagine that there
was a severe outbreak in the U.S.
and possibly in your community and a lot of people were getting very sick from
the flu and the flu was spreading rapidly from person to person."
Methodology
This is the 25th in a series of studies by the Harvard
School of Public Health Project on the Public and
Biological Security. The study was designed and analyzed by researchers at
the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). The project director is Robert J. Blendon of the Harvard School of Public Health. The
research team also includes John M. Benson and Kathleen J. Weldon of the
Harvard School of Public Health, and Melissa J. Herrmann of ICR/International
Communications Research. Fieldwork was conducted via telephone for the Project
by ICR/International Communications Research of Media (PA) between September 28
and October 5, 2006
The survey was conducted with a representative
national sample of 1,697 adults age 18 and over, including an oversample of adults who had children under age 18 in their
households. Altogether 821 such adults with children were interviewed. In the
overall results, this group was weighted to its actual proportion (38%) of the
total adult population.
The margin of error for the total sample is plus or
minus 2.4 percentage points.
Possible sources of non-sampling error include
non-response bias, as well as question wording and ordering effects.
Non-response in telephone surveys produces some known biases in survey-derived
estimates because participation tends to vary for different subgroups of the
population. To compensate for these known biases, sample data are weighted to the
most recent Census data available from the Current Population Survey for
gender, age, race, region, and education. Other techniques, including
random-digit dialing, replicate subsamples, callbacks
staggered over times of day and days of the week, and systematic respondent
selection within households, are used to ensure that the sample is
representative.
For further information contact: Robin Herman,
HSPH Office of Communications
(617) 432-4388
rherman@hsph.harvard.edu
Harvard
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