Even before the latest wave of the coronavirus pandemic, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, nearly 97 million U.S adults reported knowing someone killed by COVID-19. Roughly the same number of people reported that they or another immediate family member had caught the virus. Those estimates are based on a SHADAC COVID-19 survey, conducted as part of the AmeriSpeak omnibus survey by NORC at the University of Chicago, in April 2021. An estimated one-third of the U.S. adult population reported a COVID-19 infection occurring in their immediate family, and about one-third also reported knowing someone who died of the virus. However, there were few statistically significant differences across demographic subgroups. The main exceptions were by race and ethnicity, with Black and Hispanic adults significantly more likely to report knowing someone who died from COVID-19 than White adults, and Hispanic adults significantly more likely to report a COVID-19 infection within their immediate families.
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