While most Americans worry about an Ebola outbreak occurring in the United States, most also believe that they and their families are all-but immune to the deadly disease. That’s according to a new NBC News survey conducted by SurveyMonkey in which 51% of respondents said they are worried about a domestic outbreak, but only 30% said they’re concerned it will affect them or their families.
Perhaps that’s because they trust the Obama administration to handle it. Of those surveyed, 54% expressed at least a fair amount of confidence in the federal government to prevent a major Ebola outbreak on domestic soil. Similarly, most respondents expressed confidence in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (76%), the National Institutes of Health (64%), the World Health Organization (64%), and their state’s health department (62%). Trust at the local level skewed just a bit lower, with 56% expressing trust in that arena.
Most respondents (60%) favor America ramping up its efforts to prevent the virus from spreading. However, when asked the same question (“Should the United States take a more active role, a less active role, or continue its current level of activity in preventing the spread of the Ebola virus?”) with regard to preventing the virus from spreading in Africa, just 46% of respondents support a more active role than the current status quo. Similarly, most polled (51%) disapprove of the decision to send U.S. troops to Africa to help stop Ebola from spreading, with just 25% approving and about the same (24%) saying they aren’t sure.
The U.S. is sending up to 4,000 military personnel to West Africa as part of a mission to stop the disease’s deadly march.
Finally, the survey indicates that respondents believe (58%) the U.S. should create a travel ban on flights from countries where the virus has broken out, and that the U.S. should start screening passengers for Ebola at U.S. airports (73%).









