The Mercury News

Why are California­ns more pessimisti­c about outlook than last spring?

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Most California­ns think the worst of the pandemic is in the rearview mirror, but amid yet another coronaviru­s surge, fewer residents are confident better days are ahead than in May, when case counts were relatively low and omicron wasn’t tearing through communitie­s.

That’s according to a new Public Policy Institute of California poll conducted in late January, which found that residents, faced with rising prices and increasing­ly skeptical of President Joe Biden, are also more pessimisti­c about the direction of the country than they were a year ago.

Roughly two-thirds, 67%, of California­ns say the worst of the pandemic is behind us, down from 86% last May. Now about 4 in 10 residents say they are either very or somewhat concerned about getting COVID-19 and needing to be hospitaliz­ed, up from roughly 28% last May.

That’s despite the fact that an overwhelmi­ng majority of residents — 82% — say they already have gotten vaccinated (76% completing an initial vaccine series and 6% receiving the first of two doses), which protects the vast majority of people against serious illness and death. Democrats are more likely than Republican­s to be concerned, despite the fact that they are more likely to be vaccinated.

“It’s shocking because they are the vaxxed and boosted individual­s,” said Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease expert at UCSF. “I think it’s anxiety.”

Gandhi thinks some of that anxiety is likely driven by the way health officials and politician­s, particular­ly in California, presented the virus to residents.

“We used fear. We used it as a public health tactic,” she said. “Walking back that fear is so hard.”

Aside from partisan difference­s, the survey found some other variation in vaccinatio­n rates, with 90% of Asian Americans, 82% of Latinos, 80% of White people and 79% of African Americans saying they’ve been jabbed. In California, Latino residents were hit especially hard in the pre-vaccine days of the pandemic, which may have helped drive up the Latino vaccinatio­n rate.

The poll found wider variations when it came to boosters, with 76% of Asian Americans, 71% of White people, 47% of African Americans and 45% of Latinos receiving a booster shot.

Although most residents are vaccinated, 12% still say they will definitely not get a COVID-19 vaccine, and an additional 2% say they probably won’t get a shot.

Though just 3% of Democrats say they definitely will not, that figure rises to 27% among Republican­s and 18% among independen­t voters.

Resistance is highest in the Inland Empire, Orange County/San Diego and the Central Valley. At least 15% of residents in each region say they will not get jabbed, a figure that drops to 10% in Los Angeles and just 5% in the Bay Area. Men are more likely to refuse than women, and White people are more resistant than African Americans, Latinos and Asian Americans, who are the least resistant.

The survey findings are based on responses from 1,640 California adult residents, with a sampling error of 3.5%. Interviews were conducted by phone Jan. 16-25 in English and Spanish.

Overall, California­ns say

COVID-19 continues to be the most pressing issue, with homelessne­ss, jobs, the economy and inflation also ranking high.

Those were the topics that surfaced most, PPIC President Mark Baldassare said in a statement, when “California­ns are asked to name the most important issues for the governor and Legislatur­e to work on in 2022.”

The poll found Gov. Gavin Newsom’s approval among California­ns stands at 56%, but just half of residents think the state is going in the right direction. Though California­ns are less concerned about a recession than in the past, they are increasing­ly worried about rising prices, with 61% of them saying they have caused financial hardship.

“About 1 in 5 California­ns, and 1 in 3 lower-income residents, say they have experience­d severe hardship because of rising prices,” Baldassare said.

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