Since the end of March, 2020, IntelliSurvey has conducted 13 surveys in its ‘Life in the Time of COVID-19’ series, with each online survey fielded among a nationally representative sample of ~1000 US respondents. One drawback with this sampling approach is that it can be difficult to compare the results by race and/or ethnicity since White people constitute more than three-quarters of the US adult population, and this is mirrored in the representative sampling.
IntelliSurvey’s most recent ‘Life in the Time of COVID-19’ survey, fielded in the US on August 14, 2020, utilized a different sampling approach, collecting responses from a total of 1018 adults in the US, with roughly equal numbers of responses from four self-identified groups: White Americans, Black Americans, Asian Americans, and Americans of Hispanic or Latino descent or origin. This approach allows for an examination of how each of these groups has experienced the pandemic in terms of personal impact and beliefs.
As shown in the following chart, there are disparities by race and ethnicity in respondents’ experiences of COVID-19. In particular:
These findings are supported by a variety of reports issued by health agencies since early in the pandemic that suggest that persons in these groups are disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic; that is, compared to their shares of the total population, these groups account for higher shares of both cases and deaths from COVID-19. Both medical and socioeconomic factors may contribute to this imbalance. Underlying medical conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, are more prevalent among Black and Hispanic Americans (along with Native Americans). In addition, people of color are more likely than Whites to live in crowded, multi-family dwellings in urban areas, and less likely to be able to work from home, all of which increase the likelihood of exposure to the virus.
Some divergent beliefs and intentions about a COVID-19 vaccine emerged from the study, with Black respondents significantly less likely than White, Asian, or Hispanic respondents to:
These results may reflect a lack of trust among Black Americans with regard to the medical community, which is not surprising, given past experiments in the US such as the Tuskegee syphilis study.
Although the preceding results revealed differences among the three minority groups in this study, there were some commonalities among them, particularly regarding attitudes related to COVID-19 when compared with White respondents.
All participants were shown a randomized list of statements regarding COVID-19 and asked to indicate whether they agreed or disagreed with each. As shown below, the three minority groups, i.e., Black, Asian, and Hispanic respondents, are significantly more likely to agree that:
And significantly less likely to agree that:
It is to be expected that those who have been personally impacted by COVID-19 take it more seriously than those who have not. In this survey, compared to White respondents, larger numbers of minority respondents have had or know someone who has had (or died) from COVID-19. It is, therefore, not surprising that the majority of these three minority groups of respondents support stricter measures to stop the spread of the virus, e.g., not open schools for in-person learning, or even ‘shut down’ the country again. Conversely, White respondents in the study are less likely to have been personally impacted by COVID-19, which may explain the significantly higher percentage of this group that feels that COVID-19 is ‘just another flu.’
Over 170,000 people in the US have died to date from COVID-19 or complications from the virus, with a disproportionate number of deaths occurring among people of color. For more details, see this CDC infographic regarding COVID-19 cases, hospitalization, and death by race/ethnicity, as well as IntelliSurvey’s Differences in Pandemic Experience and Perceptions by Race and Ethnicity.
Respondents for this survey were collected via Lucid Marketplace.