Hillary Clinton may still have the best odds of winning the general election, but as she prepares to officially receive her party’s nomination at the Democratic National Convention later this month, a new poll reveals just how bruised and bloodied her candidacy has become. Despite her emergence from the F.B.I. investigation into her e-mail practices as secretary of state free of criminal charges, the scandal seems to have greatly damaged public perception of the presidential hopeful. In the days following F.B.I. Director Jim Comey’s assessment that she was “extremely careless,” The New York Times reports that Clinton lost her six-point lead over Donald Trump, as her perceived trustworthiness and preparedness took a massive hit.

Clinton and Trump are now neck-and-neck in the presidential race, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll, with 40 percent support each. Notoriously flawed though individuals polls are, especially at this stage of the race, the latest survey is telling when compared to another Times/CBS News poll conducted in June, before the release of the F.B.I.’s report and Comey’s personal condemnation of Clinton’s laissez-faire approach to cybersecurity. In the most recent poll, 67 percent of respondents said the former New York senator is not honest and trustworthy, a five percentage point increase from last month. Comparatively, 62 percent of people don’t trust Trump, but this figure has remained steady, the Times reports.

In addition to losing the public’s trust, Clinton’s perceived preparedness for office dropped by 9 percentage points over the last month, according to the latest poll. Still, the former secretary of state still leads Trump in that category. Fifty percent of people think Clinton is prepared for the Oval Office, compared to 30 percent who said the same for the former reality TV star. When it comes to addressing terrorism and national security, the two candidates both poll at 46 percent. But where the economy and trade are concerned, more people think the New York billionaire would do a better job. Clinton, however, comes out on top for race relations and illegal immigration, according to the Times.

As with all polls, it is important to take the results with a grain of salt. Throughout this election cycle, survey data has often been inexplicable, registering significant fluctuations in the absence of specific, poll-moving events. The takeaway from the latest Times/CBS News poll is the marked difference it highlights with survey data from before the release of this month’s F.B.I. report. Whether Clinton’s e-mail scandal will have an enduring impact on her campaign remains to be seen.