More Americans say they are regularly wearing masks in stores and other businesses
As the pandemic continues, a growing share of Americans say they are regularly wearing a face covering in stores and other businesses.
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As the pandemic continues, a growing share of Americans say they are regularly wearing a face covering in stores and other businesses.
The pandemic has had a divisive effect on a sense of national unity in many of the countries surveyed: A median of 46% feel more national unity now than before the coronavirus outbreak, while 48% think divisions have grown.
Black and Hispanic worshippers are less likely than their white counterparts to say they have gone to a house of worship recently.
Six-in-ten say the primary reason the number of confirmed coronavirus cases is increasing is that there are more new infections; 39% say cases are rising mainly because more people are being tested than in previous months.
Unfavorable views of China reach new historic high, and a majority supports taking a tougher stand on human rights.
U.S. adults in this group are less likely to get the facts right about COVID-19 and politics and more likely to hear some unproven claims.
70% of Americans say the core strategies for containing COVID-19 are well understood, even though studies have yielded conflicting advice.
While the CDC has pointed to some possible factors that may be contributing to this pattern, the public is divided in its perceptions.
65% of U.S. adults say that they have personally worn a mask in stores or other businesses all or most of the time in the past month.
Black Americans stand out from other racial and ethnic groups in their attitudes toward key health care questions associated with the pandemic.
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