A woman arriving on an international flight to Los Angeles International Airport wears a mask on the first day of coronavirus screenings for travelers from Wuhan, China on Jan. 18, 2020. (David McNew/Getty Images)

U.S. adults trust the CDC most and Congress least to control the spread of the coronavirus.

47% say they think someone from their state will be infected with the coronavirus.

Majority of U.S. adults support travel bans, enhanced airport screenings and quarantine protocols to prevent the spread of the virus.

Within three weeks of Chinese health officials announcing the identification of a new strain of coronavirus, the outbreak has reached over a dozen countries outside of mainland China, with over 4,500 confirmed cases of the respiratory virus and a death toll exceeding 100 — and Americans are on edge. According to a new Morning Consult poll of 2,200 U.S. adults — surveyed from Jan. 24-26, as three more cases of coronavirus were confirmed stateside — the vast majority are worried about an outbreak of the virus in the United States, with roughly 3 in 4 people either as concerned about coronavirus as they were about the 2014 outbreak of Ebola, or more concerned.

The new virus, named “2019-nCoV,” originated in the port city of Wuhan, China, and is from the same family of viruses as SARS, the viral respiratory illness that killed 774 people between 2002 and 2003. Though the World Health Organization has refrained from declaring a global health emergency yet, the number of cases worldwide is quickly accelerating and several Chinese cities are on full or partial lockdown, restricting travel for almost 60 million people during the Lunar New Year holiday. Of the potential cases of the coronavirus reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as of Jan. 27, the agency has confirmed five with another 73 people still under investigation, dubbing the outbreak a “rapidly evolving situation.”

The sudden emergence and escalation of the coronavirus have left the public particularly anxious about this outbreak: 47 percent of respondents think it is at least somewhat likely that someone in their state will become infected, despite the CDC’s observation that the virus is not yet spreading in the United States, rendering the immediate health risk low. As the level of panic grows, the public places their trust in the CDC — and no one else. The majority of U.S. adults have little to no confidence in President Donald Trump to control the spread of the virus and have slightly more confidence in airline companies than in Congress.