Albany Times Union

2017 took a negative turn

- By Niraj Chokshi

Violence, bitter partisansh­ip, an uncertain future. These are dark times.

In fact, humanity just had its gloomiest year in more than a decade, according to a new survey of the emotional lives of more than 154,000 people worldwide.

More people reported negative experience­s — defined as worry, stress, physical pain, anger or sadness — than at any point since 2005, when Gallup, the analytics and consulting company, introduced the survey.

“This is the first time that we’ve seen a really significan­t uptick in negative emotions,” said Julie Ray, the chief writer and editor of the report and survey, known as the Gallup World Poll. “It’s as high as we’ve ever measured it.”

The 2017 results, released Wednesday, are based on interviews with adults in more than 145 countries. Here are some of the findings.

A new high for feeling low

The increase in negative experience­s was driven largely by rising worry and stress, reports of each of which rose by 2 percentage points from 2016 to 2017.

“When you’re talking about 154,000 interviews for the entire world, that’s actually a lot,” Ray said. “Those two points, that change, is a lot.”

Reports of physical pain and sadness each rose by 1 percentage point, also contributi­ng to the global rise in negative experience­s, while reports of anger were unchanged.

In all, well over a third of respondent­s told Gallup in 2017 that they had experience­d a lot of worry or stress the day before taking the survey. Just under a third reported experienci­ng a lot of physical pain, while about a fifth said they had felt a lot of sadness or anger the day before.

Central African Republic

Negative experience­s were highest in the Central African Republic, which has been plagued by internal conflict for years. Not only did the country unseat Iraq, which held that dubious distinctio­n for four years running, but its 2017 negative experience score was also the highest ever recorded by Gallup.

Violence prevented the polling organizati­on from reaching about 40 percent of the country’s population, but among the people it could interview, about 3 in 4 reported experienci­ng either a lot of physical pain or a lot of worry the day before the survey.

Negative experience­s have risen fast across the greater sub-saharan region, with the negative experience index at its highest levels in a decade in 24 of 35 countries surveyed there. While no single trend can explain that shift, conflict and instabilit­y have created a growing health care crises across the region, according to Gallup.

Keeping positive

Emotions are not zero sum. While negative experience­s reached a new high in 2017, positive ones fell only slightly, to levels last seen in 2011 and 2012.

At least 70 percent of those surveyed reported feeling a lot of joy, feeling well rested, feeling treated with respect, and smiling or laughing a lot the day before being interviewe­d.

Those four experience­s, as well as whether a person learned or did something interestin­g, make up the positive experience index. Less than half of adults, 46 percent, reported learning or doing something interestin­g the day before being interviewe­d.

As in recent years, adults in Latin America had the most positive experience­s, with Paraguay topping the list.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States