Survey Finds Many
Americans Have Taken Steps to Protect Themselves Against
H1N1
Most
Are Following News About the Outbreak Closely
For
immediate release: May 8, 2009
Boston,
MA -- As part of a series about Americans' response to the H1N1 flu outbreak,
the Harvard Opinion Research Program at the Harvard School of Public Health has
released a national poll which finds that many Americans have taken steps to
protect themselves and their families against the disease. The polling was done
on May 5-6, 2009.
their families against the disease. The polling was
done on May 5-6, 2009.
Click
here for the complete survey.
Click
here for the charts.
Americans' Response
Two-thirds (67%) report that they or someone in their household has washed
their hands or used hand sanitizer more frequently in response to reports about
H1N1 flu, while a majority (55%) say they have made preparations to stay at
home if they or a family member is sick. About one in four report that they or
a household member have avoided air travel (27%) or avoided public places where
many people are gathered together (25%). About one-third (35%) of Americans say
they personally have taken steps to avoid being near someone who has flu-like
symptoms. In addition, 14 percent report that they personally have stopped
shaking hands with people, and 12 percent say they have stopped hugging and
kissing close friends or relatives.
This is the second in a series of polls about Americans' response to the
H1N1 flu outbreak. The
first survey was released May 1, 2009.
Concerns about the outbreak
The survey finds that about six in ten Americans (61%) are not currently
concerned that they or someone in their immediate family may get sick from H1N1
flu in the next 12 months. The proportion that does not express concern has
risen from 53 percent last week. However, three-fourths (77%) say they are
closely following news about the recent H1N1 flu outbreak, the same proportion
as a week ago.
"The fact that most people continue to follow the news closely suggests
that there is a lot of interest and uncertainty about the risk for themselves
and their families over the next year," said Robert J. Blendon,
Professor of Health Policy and Political Analysis at the Harvard School of
Public Health.
Parents' concerns
Nearly half (48%) of parents of children under age 18 and currently enrolled
in school are concerned that they or a family member will get sick from H1NI
flu in the next 12 months. This level of concern is significantly higher than
it is among people who do not have children in school (36%). Half (50%) of
parents with children in school report that their schools have not given them
any information about what they are doing to reduce the possible spread of H1N1
in the school.
"It might help allay parents' concerns if schools provided them with
more information about what they are doing to reduce the risk of
infection," said Blendon.
Satisfaction with public officials
Overall, Americans are satisfied with the performance of public health
officials in the H1N1 outbreak. More than eight in ten Americans say they are
satisfied with the way that public health officials have managed the response
to the outbreak (83%) and with the information public health officials have
been providing (88%).
Key trends
Recently public health officials made a decision to introduce the term
"H1N1 virus." More than four in ten (43%) of Americans now say that
they have heard the term and know it means the same thing as "swine
flu." This proportion has more than doubled from 20 percent a week ago.
Perceptions of the availability of an effective medicine or vaccine against
H1N1 could affect public response to the continuing outbreak. Nearly two-thirds
(64%) believe that there is an effective medicine to treat the disease, up from
54 percent a week ago. Most Americans (66%) don't believe that there is a
vaccine to prevent the disease, virtually unchanged from a week ago (65%).
Currently 48 percent of Americans believe that wearing a face mask will
protect them from getting H1N1 flu, down from 53 percent a week ago. About
three-fourths (78%) believe that wearing a face mask when sick will prevent
them from spreading H1N1 flu to others, the same proportion as a week ago.
Methodology
This is the 30th in a series of studies on the
public and biological security by the Harvard Opinion Research Program (HORP)
at Harvard School of Public Health. 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, Gillian K. SteelFisher,
and Kathleen J. Weldon of the Harvard School of Public Health, and Melissa J.
Herrmann of SSRS/ICR. Fieldwork was conducted via telephone (including both
landline and cell phone) for HORP by SSRS/ICR of Media (PA) on May 5-6, 2009.
The survey was conducted with a representative national sample of 1,013
adults age 18 and over, including oversamples of non-Hispanic African Americans
and Hispanics. Altogether 112 non-Hispanic African Americans and 130 Hispanics
were interviewed. In the overall results, these groups were weighted to their
actual proportion of the total adult population.
The margin of error for the total sample is plus or minus 3.6 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,
education, region, and number of adults in the household. Other techniques,
including random-digit dialing, replicate subsamples, and systematic respondent
selection within households, are used to ensure that the sample is
representative.
Funding
This Harvard School of Public Health series is funded under a cooperative
agreement with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The award
enables HORP to provide technical assistance to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) as well as to other national and state government health
officials in order to support two critical goals: (1) to better understand the
general public's response to public health emergencies, including biological
threats and natural disasters; and (2) to improve related public health
communications.
Visit the HSPH website for the latest
news, press
releases and multimedia
offerings.
For more information:
Todd Datz
617-432-3952
tdatz@hsph.harvard.edu
photo: iStockphoto/mammamaart
###
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