Survey
Documents Flu Fears
By
LiveScience Staff
posted: 04 May 2009 12:15 pm ET
Americans'
reactions to the outbreak of the H1N1 flu, aka the swine flu, may have trended
lately toward being annoyed, but nearly half were also concerned five days ago
that they or their family might actually get sick.
A
survey by the Harvard Opinion Research Program at the Harvard School of Public
Health found that 46 percent of 1,067 Americans polled on Wednesday, April 29,
worried that they or someone in their immediate family might get sick from the new flu virus in the next
12 months.
The
World Health Organization ranks this outbreak as a phase 5 incident, meaning
that it has spread within two countries in one region of the world and that a
pandemic is imminent. An upgrade to phase 6, or full-blown pandemic, would
mean the virus was also spreading among humans in a third country in a second
region of the world.
Here
are some ways Americans are responding to the outbreak, the survey found:
- 59 percent are washing
their hands or using hand sanitizer more frequently.
- 25 percent are avoiding
places where many people are gathered, such as sporting events, malls or
public transportation.
- 20 percent are avoiding
people thought to have recently traveled to Mexico.
- 17 percent are avoiding
Mexican restaurants or stores.
- 8 percent are wearing a face
mask.
- 5 percent have bought a face
mask.
- 5 percent are talking with
their doctor about health issues related to swine flu.
- 4 percent of parents have
kept their children home from school or daycare.
- 1 percent of people are getting
a prescription for antiviral medications.
"It
is a good sign that most people, though not all, are taking the most important
precaution recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to
prevent the spread of swine flu: washing their hands," said Robert J. Blendon, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health
who headed up the survey project.
Beliefs
about swine flu
The
new influenza virus is different from a regular seasonal flu because it's a
viral strain previously unknown to scientists and therefore one to which no one
has immunity. This flu, like a lot of emerging
infectious diseases typically do, has sparked some
unfounded fears. It was initially named "swine flu," but the World
Health Organization renamed it the influenza A
(H1N1) virus last week.
There
are 985 lab-confirmed
cases worldwide of the H1N1 flu as of early this morning, according to the
WHO. The United States had 226 of those cases, and Mexico had 590 of them.
There has been one death in the United States, and 25
in Mexico. Other cases (but no deaths) are known in Austria, Canada, Hong Kong,
Costa Rica, Colombia, Denmark, El Salvador, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel,
Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland and the UK.
Possibly
as a result of the early name's reference to swine, a moniker still being used
by much of the media as a shorthand, 13 percent of
Americans hold the false belief that they can get the new influenza from eating
pork, the survey found. The virus includes components of human, avian and swine
flu.
The
virus is spread from human to human through the droplets we discharge when we
sneeze or cough. So surgical face masks serve more to protect
others from wearers' droplets than to protect the wearer from others' droplets.
If you touch droplets on a surface and then touch your finger to your eyes or
nose, a face mask won't do much good. That is why public health officials
stress hand washing.
Still,
about half of Americans (53 percent) believe that wearing a face mask could
prevent them from getting sick from the swine flu, while more than
three-quarters (78 percent) believe that wearing a face mask when sick would
help keep them from getting others sick.
Study
details
Others
who worked with Blendon on the survey included John
M. Benson, Gillian K. SteelFisher, and Kathleen J. Weldon
of the Harvard, and Melissa J. Herrmann of SSRS/ICR. Fieldwork was conducted
via telephone (including both landline and cell phone) for HORP by SSRS/ICR.
The
margin of error for the total sample is plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.
This
Harvard School of Public Health series is funded under a cooperative agreement
with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.