Fresh Survey Reveals Greater part of Americans Still Suffer from Poll Outcomes Worry as President's 100th Day Draws Close, Worry levels disturb men, those with children in the family and even Trump supporters
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 20: Subsequent to one of the most contentious
presidential elections of all times and a "First 100 Days" noticeable
by belligerent administrative guidelines, travel prohibitions, military assaults,
doubts of foreign election tinkering, healthcare disputes and dangers to America’s
safety, the United States has turned into a country on edge, as stated by a fresh
survey by Radius Global Market Research contracted by healthcare appraisal site
CareDash.com.
"Nervous Nation: An Inside Look at America's Anxiety in
the Age of Trump," a survey of above 2,000 grownups aged 18 and above reviewed
between March 23-27, 2017, displays over half of Americans (59%) report being no
less than fairly worried because of the November poll outcomes, with approximately
three-fourths (71%) of Americans aged 18-44 reporting feeling worried because
of the outcomes. Approximately two-thirds of Americans (64%) concur that Donald
Trump as president is affecting more people to have worry.
"The November election results created the 'perfect
storm' of rising anxiety and it's affecting our national health," revealed
CareDash Medical Advisor and Washington, DC-area therapist, Dr. Steven Stosny
(PhD), adding, "Anxiety and nervousness stem from the fear that something
bad might happen. These feelings are intensified in times of uncertainty and
are also contagious. What we see now is Americans trying to grapple with the
uncertainty of a President known for bold and unexpected behavior, as well as a
24-hour news cycle driven in part by social media platforms that have amplified
political worries."
Americans are also involving in more unwholesome conduct as
a consequence of the November poll. Approximately half of Americans (45%) have undergone
several of the more usual signs of worry for example unhappiness, weight increase,
difficulty sleeping, relationship anguish, dislike and annoyance, and feelings
of anxiety. Of this group, approximately half (48%) of those Americans with
some signs of worry and over half (60%) aged 18-44 report involving in unwholesome
actions for example gulping alcohol, smoking, consuming unwholesome or quarreling
due to the November poll outcomes. Approximately half of Americans (47%) aged
18-44 who have undergone several of the more usual signs of nervousness also
report sleeping a lesser amount of or having not as much of sex due to the
election.
54% of men state feeling more worried due to the January swearing
in; and of those who have undergone several of the more usual signs of worry,
51% have visited or deliberated on consulting a doctor for their signs.
In contrast, just 48% of women are feeling more worried due
to the January swearing in and only 28% who have undergone several of the more usual
signs of worry have visited or thought about consulting a doctor for their signs.
72% of grownups with children in the family are no less than
fairly worried due to the November poll outcomes against 51% of grown-ups
without children in the family.
57% of grownups with children in the family who have suffered
some of the more usual signs of worry have visited or deliberated on consulting
a doctor for their signs as contrasted to just 22% of grownups without children
in the family.
43% of Trump supporters testify feeling nervous due to the
November poll outcomes.
42% of Trump supporters likewise contend that the President
is causing more people to have worry.
41% of Trump supporters are in quest of means to tackle the adverse
political setting and 36% are evading social media to lessen worry around
political remarks.
"The survey's findings that more men than women are
actively seeking medical help for Trump-induced anxiety is contradictory to
established psychological research which has repeatedly shown that men are less
likely than women to seek help from physicians and mental health
professionals," revealed Stosny, adding, "What we are experiencing
now is a new phenomenon where men, facing an onslaught of continued breaking
new alerts, social media comments and alternative facts, feel that they no
longer have the control or ability to protect their families in these uncertain
times."
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