With each shot in the arm, more and more Americans are letting down their guard — seeing family and friends outside the home again, venturing out to eat or relaxing social distancing precautions, according to the latest installment of the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
The big picture:
- Nine in 10 respondents said they know someone who's already been vaccinated, and 36% said they've been vaccinated themselves. Meanwhile, the share who know someone who died from COVID-19 has leveled off at around one in three, after climbing through 2020.
- "These are glimmers of hope," said Cliff Young, president of Ipsos U.S. Public Affairs. "We’re seeing basically the reemerging of America."
- "Obviously, it’s the vaccine itself coming online," Young said. "That conditions the way they see the world, and that world is a less risky one compared to last year."
- "We’re in a different place than we were. Fundamentally, the vaccine changes the reality. That’s exciting."
- 45% said they'd gone out to eat in the past week, up 12 percentage points from a month ago and the highest share in a year.
- 48% said they visited friends or relatives outside the home, up nine points from a month ago and the highest share since October.
- 67% said they're staying home and avoiding others as much as possible, down seven points from a month ago and the lowest share since we began asking the question 11 months ago.
- 17% said their emotional well being has improved over the past week, the highest share in a year.
- 52% of unvaccinated Americans reported seeing friends and relatives outside the home in the past week, compared with just 41% of those who'd been vaccinated.
- The share of Americans saying they are "not at all" likely to take the vaccine remained steady at around one in five.
- Their reasons included not trusting the vaccine or in some cases not trusting the government; wanting more information about side effects; or thinking they don't need it because they feel healthy now or already got the virus.
One in 10 falsely believe one of the vaccines contains aborted fetal cells.
But, depending on the question, between one fourth and one half of respondents said they didn't know if those conspiracy theories were true or not, highlighting the power of disinformation to confuse Americans.
With a little luck, the vaccinations will catch up with the idiots and provide the requisite immunity before the idiocy overwhelms prevention and we're right back in Spike Mode again.
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