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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Nisha Mal

People less likely to shake hands and hug those they don't live with

People are less likely to shake hands and hug people they do not live with following the pandemic, new polling has suggested.

Around six in 10 people (62%) say they shake hands less now than they did before Covid-19, while more than half (54%) say they have cut down on hugging people they do not live with.

The figures have been collected following an exclusive survey between YouGov and the PA news agency.

Other behaviours people say they have changed following the pandemic include nearly three-quarters (71%) saying they use hand sanitiser more than they did before the pandemic, while around two-thirds (64%) say they are more likely to stay socially distanced from people they do not live with.

Around half (51%) said they wipe down shopping trolleys or baskets in supermarkets more than they did before Covid-19, and more than a third (37%) said they are more likely to meet people outdoors, rather than inside.

The polling also questioned the British public’s feelings towards the pandemic and what it will mean for the future.

A third (33%) said they think the Covid-19 pandemic will never be effectively over in the UK, while just 4% of Britons think the pandemic is already effectively over.

The YouGov data shows 41% of Britons think it will be at least another year before the pandemic is over in the UK – including 20% who think it will be between one and two years and 21% who think more than two years.

The polling also found a split between older people and younger ones – with pensioners feeling less hopeful for the future.

A total of 40% of over-65s said they think the pandemic will never be over in the UK, compared to 24% of 18 to 24-year-olds.

The polling also revealed more than half of the British public is worried about the Omicron variant and led to fewer Britons thinking that their life has returned to how it was before the pandemic.

On December 1 to 2, a fifth of Britons (20%) said they felt like their life had returned to normal – now, that figure is just one in eight (12%).

The results were calculated after 1,652 people in Britain were polled.

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