Importantly, the vast
majority (89%) of those who attempted to get an in-person COVID-19 test
in the past month say they were able to get one. Still 11% of those who
tried to get such a test (4% of all adults) say they were unable to get
an in-person test, and 23% (7% of all adults) say they had to wait two
days or more to be tested.
One-third of those who
tried to get an at-home test (9% of all adults) say they were unable to
get one, mainly because tests were not available rather than being too
expensive (91% vs. 2% among those who tried but could not get an at-home
test).
When asked who is
responsible for the limited availability of COVID-19 tests, about half
say the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) deserves at least a fair
amount of blame. Slightly fewer think President Biden (44%) or test
manufacturers (41%) deserve at least a fair amount of blame. The survey
was in the field when President Biden announced that people could begin
to order free at-home tests on January 19.
Black and
Hispanics Adults Are More Worried than White Adults About Omicron’s
Impact on Them
About 4 in 10 adults
(42%) say they are at least somewhat worried about getting the omicron
variant, though fewer worry about having to miss work (36%), becoming
serious ill (34%), or being hospitalized (27%) as a result of a
coronavirus infection.
Black and Hispanic
adults, as well as people with lower incomes, are more likely to worry
about each of these. For example, most Hispanic (59%) and Black (54%)
adults say they are worried about becoming infected with the omicron
variant, while about a third (35%) of White adults are. Similarly,
Hispanic (57%) and Black (43%) adults are much more likely than White
(27%) adults to say they are worried about missing work due to an
infection.
Two Years
into the Pandemic, Most of the Public is Tired and Frustrated
Two years into the
pandemic, three quarters of the public say they are both tired (75%) and
frustrated (73%) by the state of the pandemic, with more than 7 in 10
Democrats, Republicans and independents reporting these emotions. Fewer
people say they are optimistic (42%), angry (40%) or confused (29%).
In addition, a large
majority (77%) also says it is inevitable that most people across the
country will get COVID-19 eventually. This includes similar shares among
those who are vaccinated (77%) and those who are not (74%), as well as
among Democrats (74%), independents (78%) and Republicans (78%).
Despite widespread
reports of vaccinated people testing positive for the omicron variant, a
substantial majority (62%) say they believe the vaccines are working
because “most vaccinated people who become infected with COVID-19 do not
require hospitalization.”
Far fewer (34%) say the
vaccines are not working because “some vaccinated people are becoming
infected.” The share who see these breakthrough infections as a sign the
vaccines are not working has increased slightly since September (26%),
driven by shifts among Republicans and unvaccinated adults.
A third (34%) of the
public currently views the pandemic as the country’s biggest problem,
slightly more than the share who say rising prices due to inflation (28%)
is the biggest problem. Fewer identify climate change (9%), racial
inequality (8%) crime (6%) or shortages due to supply-chain issues (5%).
Partisans rank these
problems differently, with three times as many Republicans (44%) as
Democrats (13%) saying inflation is the nation’s biggest problem, and
more than twice as many Democrats (51%) as Republicans (19%) saying the
pandemic is. Roughly equal shares of independents name inflation (30%)
and the pandemic (28%) as the nation’s biggest problem.
Other highlights
include:
- Nearly
a quarter (23%) of adults nationwide say they’ve personally tested
positive for COVID-19 at some point during the pandemic, including
8% who say they’ve tested positive in the past month. Among those
who tested positive in the past month, 16% (representing 1% of all
adults) say they used only an at-home test, indicating the result is
unlikely to be captured on official case counts.
- About
1 in 5 adults (19%) say they’ve personally had difficulty in the
past few months figuring out whether they needed to isolate or limit
their normal activities either after being exposed to COVID-19,
receiving a positive test result, or experiencing symptoms. Most
(58%) say federal public health authorities’ guidelines for testing
and isolation are confusing.
- Most
of the public says that COVID-19 vaccinations should be required for
people traveling on airplanes internationally (62%) and domestically
(55%). Majorities of Democrats and independents support such
requirements, though most Republicans do not.
- About
7 in 10 (71%) adults say they worry that restrictions aimed at
stopping the spread of omicron will hurt local businesses in their
area. Majorities across partisans express worry about the impact of
restrictions on local businesses.
Designed and analyzed by
public opinion researchers at KFF, the KFF Vaccine Monitor survey was
conducted from January 11-23, 2022 among a nationally representative
random digit dial telephone sample of 1,536 adults. Interviews were
conducted in English and Spanish by landline (165) and cell phone
(1,371). The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage
points for the full sample. For results based on subgroups, the margin of
sampling error may be higher.
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