One in five Californians know someone who has died from COVID-19, according to a new survey, but there are stark divides along racial and economic lines.

The number is nearly twice that — almost one in three — among Black and Latino residents, who have been disproportionately impacted by the virus, while one in four low-income Californians said they knew a victim of the virus, according to the poll, which was released by the California Health Care Foundation with the national survey firm Ipsos.

There have been more than three times as many coronavirus cases among Latinos than any other demographic group, according to the California Department of Public Health, and nearly twice as many deaths from the virus, despite making up about the same share of the population as white Californians.

Overall, more than 13,000 Californians have died from COVID-19, or about one in every 3,000 residents.

One in 10 white Californians reported knowing a victim of the virus, the lowest percentage of any demographic group. While white people make up account 36% of California’s population, they account for about 29% of the state’s fatalities from COVID-19 and 17% of its cases, compared to respective rates of 49% and 60% among Latinos, who make up about 39% of the state’s population, according to data from CDPH.

Black Californians, who account for about 6% of the state’s population, were about as likely as Latino Californians to say they knew someone who had died of COVID-19, despite accounting for a smaller share — about 7.8% — of the documented fatalities (about 33% of cases are missing race/ethnicity).

Meanwhile, a majority of Californians said they wished for some form of additional lockdown measures, and 85% of all residents said they would support additional restrictions if they prevented more deaths.

The poll also asked about imposing stricter shelter-in-place orders to limit the spread and so businesses and schools could open faster. Each was less convincing than preventing more deaths but still garnered a majority of support among all Californians.

Respondents who described themselves as liberal were more likely to say they understood California’s current guidelines and to support further measures than those who said they were conservative. Overall, 92% of respondents said they strongly or somewhat understood the state’s current rules, while between 52-67% of conservatives said they support more restrictions, compared to 79-93% of liberals and 70-90% of moderates, depending on the reason given by the pollster.

Preventing deaths was the most compelling reason for further shutdowns, followed by reopening businesses, preventing spread and reopening schools.

The poll was conducted from Aug. 21-25, which came before Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a new, four-tiered reopening plan that promised to be more stringent than the initial process, which preceded this summer’s outbreak.