many people reported mental health struggles or strained relations with loved ones. among respondents, 48 per cent reported a negative impact on their mental health since the beginning of the pandemic, compared with four per cent positive. the remaining 48 per cent reported no impact.
others reported declines in physical health, relations with their spouses, sex life, or relations with their children, with negative impacts outweighing positive in all categories.
“we have a reckoning that’s coming from this,” wright said. “people are scarred, some more than others.”
negative feelings toward the pandemic were highest in alberta at 61 per cent, and lowest in atlantic canada at 52 per cent. women generally felt more dismal then men at 58 per cent negative, compared with 52 per cent.
people in the lowest income bracket, as well as single people, reported a much higher likelihood to feel negatively about the pandemic, compared with wealthier married couples.
the poll, taken on april 9 and 10, surveyed over 1,500 randomly-selected canadians, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
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canadian attitudes toward pandemic increasingly bleak: poll