Los Angeles Times

Belief in science helps in a pandemic

- s coronaviru­s Samuel J. Abrams By Samuel J. Abrams

Ainfection rates continue to spike around the country, states and cities are diverging in their response on how to contain the spread of COVID-19.

President Trump and many governors are insisting that public schools reopen for the fall, as is the case in Florida, while other states and regions are adopting a more cautious approach.

Los Angeles and San Diego, for instance, announced last Monday that their public schools would be online only this fall. On Friday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered that most school classrooms in the state stay closed. And he has rolled back the reopening of many businesses and closed indoor dining and social spaces, even as Georgia’s governor rescinded local mask orders.

Political leaders in California have largely had public support for their decisions. One reason may be that California­ns have greater faith in scientists than do people elsewhere in the country.

New data from the American

Enterprise Institute’s Survey on COVID-19 and American Life show that California residents hold science profession­als in high regard. The survey asks how much confidence, if any, respondent­s have in various groups of people — local government, news media, college professors, federal government officials — being able to act in the best interests of the public.

Some 45% of California­ns said they had a “great deal” of confidence in scientists to act in the best interests of the public, compared with 38% nationally and only 35% of Floridians surveyed. The inverse is true in the case of President Trump: Only 12% of California­ns have great confidence in him acting in the public’s interest, compared with 20% of Floridians.

The data reveal that 68% of California residents think scientists make decisions and recommenda­tions based on fact and systematic investigat­ion. Other parts of the country think differentl­y. Only 47% in Texas, 51% in Florida and 54% in the South (17 states, including those on the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, up to Maryland) believe the same. These are significan­t difference­s and may help explain the political reticence and delay among leaders in some of those states to impose tighter coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, such as mask mandates, despite the surge in new infections.

No surprise, these sentiments toward science during the coronaviru­s crisis play out in attitudes about personal behavior in the pandemic. For instance, when asked whether one would be comfortabl­e attending a worship service in person, 50% of California­ns said they would be very uncomforta­ble doing this, compared with 39% of Floridians and 42% for the rest of the nation. Similarly, when asked about attending a sporting event, 60% of California­ns said they would be very uncomforta­ble, compared with 43% of Floridians.

The same pattern is seen in socializin­g with friends and taking children to playground­s. California­ns are more cautious because they are aware of the dangers of such behaviors.

In terms of public policies, California­ns are more apt to accept the evidence and advice that doctors and scientists have presented to the public. The survey also found that when asked to weigh the costs and benefits of shutting down businesses and social life, 65% of

California­ns supported shutdowns to keep the public safe. That number was appreciabl­y lower in Florida and Texas — both at 54%.

California­ns are not experienci­ng COVID-19 differentl­y from the rest of the country. Almost 90% are following the coronaviru­s news closely and are feeling the dire economic impacts, just like Americans everywhere else. It’s important to note that California­ns are not embracing scientific evidence because the state is overwhelmi­ngly liberal. The survey shows that California leans slightly to the left; 37% of California­ns say they are liberal, 33% say they are conservati­ve, and the remaining 28% declare themselves as moderate. California leans a bit more left than the national average, which generally leans to the right.

As White House officials push to reopen the country and public schools, most California­ns are rejecting that dangerous impulse — based on science.

isa professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence College and a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States