USA TODAY US Edition

Most Americans don’t blink at wearing a mask

Despite some disagreeme­nts on distancing, 84% say they have covered up.

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Rebecca Morin

WASHINGTON – Despite high-profile incidents of Americans refusing to wear face masks, an overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans say they have worn a face covering during the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to a new survey.

More than four out of five Americans – 84% – say they have worn a mask in public in an effort to limit the spread of coronaviru­s, according to a survey from the Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscap­e Project.

Although reopening economies and wearing a mask have become partisan talking points, the majority of Democrats and Republican­s say they have worn a mask in public.

The Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscap­e Project is a large-scale study of the American electorate. Throughout the 2020 election cycle, the researcher­s aim to conduct 500,000 interviews about policies and the presidenti­al candidates. This survey of 4,576 Americans was conducted May 7 to 14. There is a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.

Eighty-nine percent of Democrats and 81% of Republican­s say they have worn a mask in public, according to the survey. There is a small disparity among age groups: Younger people are slightly less likely to have worn a mask in public. Roughly three out of four (78%) Americans ages 18 to 29 say they’ve worn a face mask in public, and 90% of Americans 65 and older say they have.

Robert Griffin, research director for the Democracy Fund Voter Study Group, said that although there’s a narrative of “some sort of cultural war” about wearing masks, the data does not show that.

“The idea that there is a sizable portion of the population who’s somehow violently opposed to this behavior that public health officials are advising just doesn’t seem to line up,” he said.

Over the past several weeks, there have been several reports and viral videos of people refusing to wear face masks in public areas, such as stores and restaurant­s.

This month, security guard Calvin Munerlyn was fatally shot after turning away a customer for trying to enter a Family Dollar in Michigan without a mask. A woman in Alabama was taken down by a police officer after an altercatio­n with a Walmart employee who asked her to wear a mask. Most recently, a video of a verbal altercatio­n between a Costco customer and employee in Colorado went viral after the customer was asked to leave the store because he was

not wearing a mask.

President Donald Trump has also declined to wear a mask in public. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends “wearing cloth face coverings in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain (e.g., grocery stores and pharmacies) especially in areas of significan­t community-based transmissi­on.”

Although there are some difference­s along demographi­c lines, the majorities of all groups have worn a mask in public, according to an analysis from Nationscap­e Insights, a project of Democracy Fund, UCLA and USA TODAY.

There is a gap among people who have worn masks when it comes to what activities they are willing to participat­e in if restrictio­ns were lifted.

The biggest gap is between people who would and would not attend a profession­al sporting event. Among people who say they would attend a sporting event if restrictio­ns were lifted, 75% say they had worn a mask in public.

Among those who say they would not attend a profession­al sporting event, 92% say they have worn a mask in public.

The next largest gap comes between those who would go to a stadium concert and those who wouldn’t.

Of those who say they would go to a stadium concert, 76% say they’ve worn a face mask in public. Among those who say they would not go to a stadium concert, 91% say they’ve worn a face mask in public.

Griffin said there is a clear relationsh­ip where the people most likely to wear a mask “are also the folks who are going, ‘Hey, I’m going to be more cautious about this even if things do reopen, and I’m not certain I’ll actually engage in them at all.’ ”

 ?? JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS ?? People keep their distance from one another to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 while waiting to get coffee May 2 at a shop in Chicago.
JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS People keep their distance from one another to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 while waiting to get coffee May 2 at a shop in Chicago.

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