The Commercial Appeal

Poll: Virus-weary Americans feeling less festive this year

- Tammy Webber and Hannah Fingerhut

WASHINGTON – Maureen Brennan will spend Christmas with her daughter at their Nashua, New Hampshire, home after declining invitation­s from other relatives to celebrate with them. Michael Smith will mark the holidays alone in Elko, Nevada, unwilling to risk being infected with the coronaviru­s before he can be vaccinated.

Neither feels overly festive this holiday season, reflecting the mood of many Americans as a year marred by a national health crisis and teetering economy ends with the coronaviru­s pandemic still raging out of control. That’s according to a survey from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research that also finds some Americans are feeling a bit sadder, lonelier and less grateful than last year.

Smith, 69, said he usually spends Christmas alone, but the pandemic has been especially difficult because he likes to frequent local coffee shops and chat with friends and neighbors. The Caribbean cruise he looks forward to every year, which would have set sail on Jan. 3, was canceled.

So he’s mostly been staying home, fearful of what could happen if he contracted the virus, because of a monthlong hospitaliz­ation for pneumonia five years ago.

“I’m stressed that I can’t just get in my car and go someplace,” said Smith, who fills his time by puttering on his tractor and doing chores around his property.

Just 22% of Americans say they feel very or extremely festive this year, down from 49% one year ago. Those who do feel festive tend to be those least worried about the virus.

Holidays are always a stressful time, “but now people are feeling really, really worn down because this has been going on for so long,” said Dr. Karestan Koenen, a professor of psychiatri­c epidemiolo­gy at the Harvard School of Public Health. “Some people are suffering financially, and stimulus checks are running out.”

The pandemic – which has driven health care systems to the brink, thrown millions out of work and killed more than 310,000 in the U.S. – is casting a long shadow, with research showing that it has taken a toll on Americans’ mental health.

About 4 in 10 Americans are still intensely worried that they or a family member will be infected, with roughly three-quarters at least somewhat concerned. The coronaviru­s vaccine has capped the year with a glimmer of hope, but the poll found only about half of Americans are ready to get vaccinated immediatel­y, with the rest unsure or uninterest­ed. The poll was conducted shortly before the Pfizer-biontech vaccine was authorized for emergency use.

Overall, half of Americans say they’re at least somewhat lonely this holiday season, up from 41% last year. Fifty-two percent say they’re at least somewhat sad, compared to 44% last year.

Adults under 30 are more likely than those older to say they feel very sad or lonely – and more feel these emotions this year than did last year.

Koenen said this is a time that young adults normally would be starting their independen­t lives. But now, graduation ceremonies may have been canceled, they may be forced to live with their families and it could be difficult to find a job because of the slowed economy.

For those who live alone, it’s “really hard right now (because) you’re literally alone all the time,” she said.

Brennan, 76, said she’s lucky to have the companions­hip of her adult daughter, and hadn’t worried much about the virus until the number of infections and deaths began climbing in recent weeks. She and her daughter have been careful, wearing masks and patronizin­g the same stores to minimize potential exposure.

“But when figures started ramping up again … I could feel a sense of foreboding, especially watching what’s going on around (town) with the lack of stringency and the lack of mask-wearing,” said Brennan, a retired health care worker, who said she’s stocked up on baked goods and other favorites to ride out the holidays at home.

Both Brennan, whose husband died five years ago, and Smith said they have found satisfacti­on in helping others, rather than dwelling on what they cannot do.

“It is important to take care of those who absolutely need it and those who need only on a temporary basis,” said Brennan, who has donated to Nashua’s soup kitchen and children’s home.

Just 37% of Americans say they feel especially generous, compared with 52% last year.

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