Most adults continue to mask indoors in public places and still limit their pre-pandemic activities.
Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, as guidance on precautions continues to fluctuate, nearly 6 in 10 adults surveyed by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) report they have not completely returned to what they consider “normal” pre-pandemic activities.
Masks remained on, at least for 51% of adults who said in the past 30 days they wore a face covering every time or most of the time when indoors in public places. That included 28% who said they wore one every time, the survey said.
KFF published its latest “COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor: Views on the Pandemic at Two Years,” with an accompanying analysis of the survey results. The monitor is an ongoing research project tracking the public’s attitudes and experiences with COVID-19 vaccinations.
The results published April 6 came from a surveyof 1243 adults conducted March 15 to 22, marking the 2-year anniversary of the pandemic.
“Conventional wisdom may be that Americans are ready to put COVID-19 in the rearview mirror and cast precautions aside,” the analysis said. But the report found “most adults have not yet resumed all of their normal pre-pandemic activities and most continue to mask regularly in public places.”
The survey, which was conducted prior to the US Food and Drug Administration approval of a second booster dose for certain groups, shows 40% of adults think people should stop wearing masks in public places “so things can get back to normal.”
Larger shares of Black adults (88%) and Hispanic adults (69%) say people should continue to wear a mask in public places, versus white adults (49%). “This finding may be reflective of larger shares of Black and Hispanic adults working in service industries compared to White adults, increasing their risk of exposure to COVID-19,” according to KFF.
“When asked to name in their own words the hardest part of the pandemic over the past two years, people most often cited the lack of human interactions with about one in four (27%) adults saying the hardest part of the pandemic was isolating and not seeing people,” the KFF report said.
“On the flip side, when asked about the positives of the pandemic, 24% of adults say changes brought about by the pandemic have made them closer to their families.”