From Yahoo:
“Poll: Millions in US struggle
through life with few to trust”
Karen Glidden's loneliness became
unbearable during the coronavirus pandemic The 72-year-old widow, who suffers
from vision loss and diabetes and lives far from any relatives, barely left her
house in Champion, Michigan, this past year, for fear of contracting the virus.
Finally vaccinated, she was looking forward to venturing out when her beloved
service dog died last month. It doesn't help that her circle of trusted friends
has dwindled to one neighbor she counts on to help her shop, get to the doctor
and hang out. "I feel like I’m in a prison most of the time and once in a
while, I get to go out,” said Glidden, whose adult children live in California
and Hawaii, where she was born and raised. She is not alone in her sense of
social isolation.
Millions of Americans are
struggling through life with few people they can trust for personal and
professional help, a disconnect that raises a key barrier to recovery from the
social, emotional and economic fallout of the pandemic, according to a new a
poll from The Impact Genome Project and The Associated Press-NORC Center for
Public Affairs Research. The poll finds 18% of U.S. adults, or about 46 million
people, say they have just one person or nobody they can trust for help in
their personal lives, such as emergency child care needs, a ride to the airport
or support when they fall sick. And 28% say they have just one person or nobody
they can trust to help draft a resume, connect to an employer or navigate
workplace challenges. The isolation is more acute among Black and Hispanic
Americans. Thirty-eight percent of Black adults and 35% of Hispanic adults said
they had only one or no trusted person to help navigate their work lives,
compared with 26% of white adults. In their personal lives, 30% of Hispanic
adults and 25% of Black adults said they have one or no trusted people, while
14% of white adults said the same. Researchers have long debated the idea that
the U.S. has suffered from a decline in social capital, or the value derived
from personal relationships and civic engagement.
The General Social Survey, a
national representative survey conducted by NORC since 1972, suggests that the
number of people Americans feel they can trust had declined by the early 2000s,
compared with two decades earlier, although there is little consensus about the
extent of this isolation or its causes. The rise of social media has added
another layer of debate, as experts explore whether it broadens networks or
lures people in isolating echo chambers. The Impact Genome/AP-NORC poll sought
to measure how much social capital Americans can count as they try to pick up
the pieces of lives fractured by the pandemic. The findings suggest that for
many Americans, the pandemic has chipped away at whatever social capital they
had going into it. Americans were more likely to report a decline than an
increase in the number of people they could trust over the past year. Just 6%
of Americans said their network of trusted people grew, compared with 16% who
reported that it shrank. While the majority of Americans said the number of
people they could trust stayed the same, nearly 3 in 10 said they asked for
less support from family and friends because of COVID-19. Community bonds have
proved to be critical to recovery from calamities such as Superstorm Sandy in
2012, said Jennifer Benz, deputy director of The AP-NORC Center. But the nature
of the pandemic made those bonds difficult or even impossible to maintain.
Schools, community centers, churches, synagogues and mosques closed. People
couldn't ask neighbors or grandparents for help with child care or other needs
for fear of spreading the virus.
About half of Americans are
engaged in civic groups such as religious institutions, schools or community
service groups, according to the new poll. And 42% of all adults said they have
become less involved with civic groups during the pandemic, compared with just
21% who said they became more engaged. “Compared to the way social capital can
be leveraged in other disasters, the key difference has been that this is a
disaster where your civic duty was to be on your own,” Benz said. Surveys from
the Pew Research Center suggested that relocation increased during the
pandemic. While some people moved to be closer to family, more relocated
because of job loss or other financial stresses.
Warlin Rosso, 29, has moved often
in pursuit of financial stability, often at the cost of his social ties. He
left behind his entire family, including 14 siblings, when he immigrated to the
U.S. five years ago from the Dominican Republic. He worked at a warehouse in
Chicago for three years, sharing an apartment with a girlfriend. But when that
relationship fell apart, he couldn't afford to move out on his own. In December
2019, he relocated to Jackson, Mississippi, where a childhood friend let him
move in. That friend, Rosso said, remains the only person in Jackson he can
trust for help. As the pandemic closed in, Rosso struggled in a city where the
Hispanic community is tiny. Through social media, he found work with a
Nicaraguan man who owned a construction business. Later, he found a training
program that landed him a job as hospital aide. His co-workers are friendly,
but he feels isolated. Sometimes, he said, patients bluntly ask to be helped by
a non-Latino worker. He hopes eventually to get a similar job back in Chicago,
where he has friends. “It's not always welcoming for Hispanics here,” Rosso
said. “Here, I'm alone."
The AP-NORC poll of 2,314 adults
was conducted March 25-April 15 using a sample drawn from NORC’s
probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of
the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus
or minus 2.9 percentage points.
^ This is extremely sad and hard
to read/hear. This trend has been on-going long before the current Pandemic,
but of course made worse by the Covid. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/poll-millions-us-struggle-life-120028464.html
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