More than three-quarters of Americans want an Ebola travel ban.

An NPR/Truven Health poll found that 77% of Americans “believe the U.S. should take measures, such as suspending travel to affected areas, to prevent the spread of Ebola to the U.S.”

Though Liberian immigrant Thomas Eric Duncan died after becoming the first person on American soil to be diagnosed with Ebola and infecting at least two nurses who cared for him, the Obama administration has repeatedly insisted that a travel ban would do more harm than good. Obama said last week that though he was not “philosophically against” a travel ban, instituting one will not keep Americans safe. This week, though, the Obama administration instituted a limited travel ban on travelers from West Africa, limiting travel to five airports where they can be screened for Ebola symptoms. African nations, as Breitbart News reported, have been containing Ebola by instituting travel restrictions and border closures.

The poll, which was conducted Oct. 1-15 and has a margin of error of +/- 1.8 percentage points, also found that 97% of Americans are aware of the Ebola outbreak. Here are some other findings: