Australians’ fear of COVID-19 infection hits all-time high-

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Australians' fear of COVID-19 infection hits all-time high-


By IANS

CANBERRA: More Australians than ever think they will contract Covid-19 in the short-term future despite the high vaccination rate, a survey has found.

Researchers from Australian National University (ANU) recently published the latest edition of their study on the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic across the country.

It found that 40 per cent of Australians think they are likely or very likely to catch Covid-19 in the next six months — the highest rate during the pandemic, Xinhua news agency reported.

Nicholas Biddle, the co-author of the study from ANU’s Center for Social Research, said fear of infection was four times higher than in April 2021.

“In April 2021 around one-in-10 Australians, 10.7 per cent, were worried they would get infected by Covid-19. Now, 40 per cent of us think the same,” he said in a media release on Friday.

“This is a huge jump and shows that even though the vast majority of adult Australians are getting vaccinated against Covid-19, many of us think it is inevitable we will get the disease at some point in time, especially as the country opens up more and more,” he said.

The portion of respondents who said they are experiencing “severe mental stress” as a result of the pandemic also rose to an all-time high of 12.5 per cent compared to the previous high of 10.6 per cent in April 2020.

On Saturday morning, Australia reported 1,363 new locally-acquired cases as the country continues to battle the third wave of Covid-19 infections.

The majority of new cases were in Victoria, the country’s second-most populous state with Melbourne as the capital city, where 1,166 cases and five deaths were reported.

As of Friday, 91.4 per cent of Australians aged 16 and over had received at least one vaccine dose and 84.9 per cent were fully inoculated, according to the Department of Health.



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