A survey in early March found that the most common sources of stress in America are money, elections and the COVID-19 outbreak.

But new data collected by WalletHub suggests that this stress is being felt a lot more in some states than in others.

Crossing four years of state statistics measuring stress related to work, family, money, safety and health — which factored in state responses to coronavirus — WalletHub was able to measure which states were the most stressed, and which were the least.

Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Arkansas and West Virginia came in with the top five highest overall stress scores, while New Hampshire, Utah, Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota and Minnesota occupied the bottom six spots.

While coming in 46th overall, Utah was the least stressed about work in the nation and the second least stressed about family — largely due to the fact that it had the lowest divorce rate in the country.

Even though Utah fared well when compared to the rest of the nation, that doesn’t mean Utahns aren’t feeling any stress.

Ashley Greenwell, the clinical director of the Trauma, Stress and Resilience Program at the Utah Center for Evidenced Based Treatment, shared the following tips with WalletHub on how to mitigate stress in yourself and your children at home.