COVID-19

Most Filipinos remain stressed due to pandemic – SWS

Aika Rey

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Among those who remained stressed because of the coronavirus crisis are members of families who experienced involuntary hunger

Most Filipinos remained stressed due to the coronavirus pandemic, pollster Social Weather Stations found out in a July 3 to 6 survey.

The SWS says 86% or close to 9 in 10 Filipinos said that the pandemic brought stress into their lives. The July survey was a follow-up from the one conducted in May, where 89% said they experienced stress because of the spread of SARS-CoV-2.

At leat 51% of the 1,555 surveyed said they experienced “great stress” while 35% answered “much stress.” Slightly less number of Filipinos at 10% felt “little stress” while those who did not stress over the pandemic remained at 4% of the surveyed.

Of those who felt great stress, 62% were among families who experienced involuntary hunger – lower than the May survey at 68%. Back in May, majority of the areas around the country, Metro Manila included, was still under a lockdown.

SWS also found out that majority (55%) of those who answered this used to have jobs.

Those who experienced great stress were higher from Metro Manila and Visayas. Those who answered this declined in Visayas from 63% to 56% – still, the number remained high compared to other island regions Balance Luzon (49%) and Mindanao (46%).

Majority of the surveyed junior high school graduates were also more stressed too at 58%, compared to 50% among non-elementary graduates.

The July 3 to 6 survey was a probability-based survey, conducted using phones and computer-assisted telephone interviews with 1,555 adult Filipinos nationwide: 306 in the National Capital Region, 451 in Balance Luzon or Luzon outside of Metro Manila, 388 in Visayas, and 410 in Mindanao.

The nationwide survey has a sampling error of ±2% for national figures and ±6% for Metro Manila, ±5% for Balance Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

On July 3, President Rodrigo Duterte signed the Anti-Terror Law, in the middle of the pandemic. The number of nationwide coronavirus cases at that day breached 40,000.

On July 5, the Metro Rail Transit Line 3 management announced that hundreds of personnel testing for coronavirus. This included ticket sellers.

Before the survey period, the Philippine government has already stopped giving cash aid to workers. Mass transportation had also resumed but at a limited capacity and much less number of units, leading to longer commute time and forcing commuters to take alternative transport arrangements. – Rappler.com

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Aika Rey

Aika Rey is a business reporter for Rappler. She covered the Senate of the Philippines before fully diving into numbers and companies. Got tips? Find her on Twitter at @reyaika or shoot her an email at aika.rey@rappler.com.