Of the 15 largest metropolitan areas in the US, Seattle is apparently the most stressed out.
The city has the highest percentage of adult residents who reported feeling “nervous, anxious or on edge” for at least several days in the last two weeks, The Seattle Times reported, citing data from the Census Bureau.
According to the newspaper, the data comes from a survey conducted by the bureau’s Household Pulse Survey from Sept. 29 to Oct. 11.
The survey — which is conducted approximately every two weeks — includes data for each of the 50 states and Washington, D.C., as well as the 15 largest metropolitan areas.
The Seattle Times analyzed the data from the survey to find that 54.5 percent of the Seattle population reported feeling stressed. The second-most anxious city was Houston, with 50.5 percent of the population reporting those feelings, the paper found.
To see how the rest of the top metro areas ranked, here’s The Seattle Times’ analysis:
- Seattle
Percentage of the population who reported feeling “nervous, anxious or on edge” (stressed out): 54.5 percent - Houston
Stressed out: 50.5 percent - Boston
Stressed out: 48.8 percent - Philadelphia
Stressed out: 48 percent - San Francisco
Stressed out: 47.7 percent - Washington D.C.
Stressed out: 46.5 percent - Chicago
Stressed out: 46.3 percent - Phoenix, Arizona
Stressed out: 46.3 percent - The Angels
Percentage of the population who reported feeling “nervous, anxious or on edge” for at least several days in the last two weeks: 46.1 percent - Detroit
Stressed out: 43.9 percent - Riverside, California
Stressed out: 43.7 percent - Dallas
Stressed out: 43.1 percent - New York City
Stressed out: 42 percent - Miami
Stressed out: 39.7 percent - Atlanta
Stressed out: 39 percent