Opinion

OPINION | BRENDA BLAGG: A new poll of Arkansas residents shows most have witnessed death, illness in pandemic

New polls of residents shows impact of covid-19

Covid-19 has directly touched more Arkansans than you might imagine.

The recently released annual Arkansas Poll found that 69 percent of respondents personally know someone who has been hospitalized or died as a result of having the virus.

That's almost seven out of 10 of us who know someone whose life has been cut short or been sick enough to require hospitalization during the ongoing pandemic that has now seen more than 8,500 Arkansans die.

More than three times as many Arkansans have been hospitalized from among the 516,245 confirmed and probable covid-19 cases in Arkansas since the start of the pandemic.

The numbers change constantly, but those are Monday's numbers from the Arkansas Department of Health.

The good news is that the active case count has slowed and the number of hospitalizations lessened as more Arkansans have gotten vaccinated.

The bad news is that immunizations are still lagging.

Immunization of children age 5 to 11 has begun, but those numbers aren't yet available from the Health Department. Among other Arkansans who are eligible for the free shots, anyone age 12 and up, the department reports more than 1.4 million are fully immunized. That's still only 55.1 percent of that population.

Generally, that level of immunization is attributed to hesitancy among other Arkansans to take the shots, despite an intense campaign to encourage holdouts to get vaccinated.

Unfortunately, many Arkansans are also resisting other measures to protect the public health, according to that recent Arkansas Poll.

Respondents were asked whether they favor or oppose requiring people to wear a mask or show proof of vaccination before they can do certain activities.

As you might imagine, opinions are divided.

While 61 percent of respondents favored requiring masks to travel by airplane, for example, only 42 percent favored requiring masks inside a restaurant.

Only 50 or 51 percent of respondents favored requiring masks to go to a sporting event or concert, attend public college and universities in person, attend K-12 public schools or shop inside stores and businesses.

Showing proof of vaccination in each of those circumstances was even less popular with respondents, never rising to more than 48 percent (to travel by airplane) but falling as low as 33 percent (to shop inside stores and businesses).

The Arkansas Poll is an annual survey sponsored by the Diane D. Blair Center of Southern Politics and Society at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Dr. Janine Parry is the director of the poll, which is in its 23rd year.

The covid-related questions follow a long-standing practice of incorporating new issues in the poll, which also addresses several repeat questions from past polls. It also measures approval ratings of current officeholders and changing attitudes about "life in Arkansas."

By far the most respondents, 29 percent, identified the economy as the most important issue facing people in Arkansas today.

Health care came in second at 9 percent with politicians, education and drugs each being cited by 8 percent of respondents.

Interestingly, Arkansas Poll respondents are apparently peeved at all of the current officeholders.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson and U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton each saw their approval ratings plummet in the past year.

Hutchinson's rating dropped from 69 percent to 57 percent, Boozman's from 50 percent to 37 percent and Cotton's from 58 percent to 49 percent.

Each of the Republicans are still way ahead of President Joe Biden, who drew a 63 percent disapproval rating from respondents, while only 30 percent approved of the Democratic president's performance.

But even Biden more than doubled one other group's approval rating.

The U.S Congress fell to 13 percent approval in the 2021 poll with 74 percent disapproving of its performance.


A full summary report of the 2021 Arkansas Poll, a telephone survey of 800 randomly selected adult Arkansans conducted statewide between Oct. 12 and 24, can be found on the Arkansas Poll web page: https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/political-science/partners/arkansas-poll.php.

The poll has a +/- 3.5 percent margin of error.

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