| Majority of Public Maintains Support for Addressing Health Care Reform Now | |
by Healthy News - 8/14/2009
Evidence That Criticisms Are Registering As Debate Intensifies
Menlo
Park, CA -- While Congress works through specific health reform
proposals, the July Kaiser Health Tracking Poll finds a majority of the
public remains supportive of taking action on health reform now, though
there is some softening of support as criticisms and doubts seem to be
registering.
As has been the case over the past ten months, a
majority of the American people (56%) continue to believe that health
reform is more important than ever despite the country''s economic
problems, and the public believes by a two to one margin (51% versus
23%) that the country will be better rather than worse off if Congress
and the president enact health reform. More Americans think they and
their family will be better off (39%) than worse off (21%) if
legislation passes, with roughly a third (32%) believing it will make
no difference for them or their family.
But with health reform
moving from the abstract to concrete legislative proposals, criticisms
made during the policy debate appear to be having an impact on the
public and several indicators have softened somewhat from earlier this
year. A larger share of the public is worried that Congress and the
president will pass a bill that’s bad for their family (54%) than are
worried that health care reform will not happen this year (39%). While
a majority of the public favors health care reform now, the share that
is supportive is down five percentage points since June (from 61% to
56%). The proportion who say passage of health care reform will make
things worse for their own family, although relatively small, has
doubled since February (from 11% to 21%), as has the proportion who say
the country would be worse off if health care reform passed (from 12%
to 23%). Specific proposals to cover the uninsured, while still
supported by majorities, also show a weakening in support. For
example, overall support for an employer mandate fell from 69 percent
to 64 percent since last month and those who "strongly" favored the
idea fell from 42 percent to 29 percent.
Financing health
reform is front and center of the current debate. Roughly half (51%)
of the public is willing to pay more for expanding health coverage--up
ten percentage points from last month. And some revenue measures have
strong support (taxing cigarettes, taxing Americans earning more than
$250,000 annually, and taxing alcohol, beer and wine all have greater
than 60% support). However, consistent with the overall pattern,
support for revenue measures has softened across the board with a
portion of the public shifting from "strongly" to "somewhat"
supportive. For example, the percentage who strongly support taxing
those earning more than $250,000 annually fell from 49 percent to 40
percent since last month.
One highly debated issue has been the
establishment of a public health insurance plan to compete with private
plans--six in ten support this idea. When asked if they would be
interested in purchasing a public insurance plan if it were made
available, about a quarter (23%) of the public say they would "very
likely" look into it and about a quarter (23%) would be "not at all
likely" to explore purchasing such a plan.
The proportion of
the public following the health reform debate closely (27%) has not
changed much over the past several months. But the proportion who
report seeing an ad about health care reform is up 10 percentage points
since last month (31% compared to 21% in June), with nearly as many
reporting seeing a negative as a positive ad, another change from June
when reported viewing of positive ads clearly dominated.
"The
public wants help with their health care bills and supports health
reform, but the hotter the debate and the longer it lasts, the more
anxious the public will become," said Kaiser President and CEO Drew
Altman.
More on the Public Plan
Echoing the policy debate,
roughly four in ten people (43%) say a public plan would be more likely
to drive private companies out of business, while just as many (45%)
hold the opposite view, saying it would cause private companies to
become more efficient and provide better products.
People’s
views on a public plan are moveable as the survey shows by replicating
arguments used in the current reform debate. When those who initially
support the public plan are told that this could give the government an
unfair advantage over private companies, overall support drops to 35
percent. Conversely, when opponents are told that public plans would
give people more choice or help drive down costs through competition,
overall support jumps to roughly seven in ten.
Effective Arguments For and Against Health Care Reform
When
offered a number of possible arguments used in the current health care
debate, certain messages resonate more with the public than others.
Messages that make the public feel more favorable about a health care reform plan:
- Can keep own doctor or health plan (74% more likely to support reform if they heard)
- Would ensure financial health of Medicare (67%)
- Would cover pre-existing conditions (66%)
- Won’t increase budget deficit (63%)
- Would provide financial help to get health insurance for those who need it (63%)
- Would save country money over time (63%)
- Higher quality of care for Medicare patients (59%)
Messages that make the public feel less favorable about a plan:
- Was going to increase premiums/out of pocket costs (66% less likely to support if they heard)
- Would result in cuts in Medicare that make doctors less willing to participate (62%)
- Limited own choice of doctors (62%)
- Get government too involved in your health care (59%)
- Would reduce quality of care in Medicare (58%)
- Would increase taxes (58%)
- Would increase budget deficit (45%)
"Public
support for health reform will depend on which arguments get through to
the American people and, ultimately, how they answer the question of
how will health reform affect their family," said Kaiser Vice President
and Director of Public Opinion and Survey Research Mollyann Brodie.
Is One Trillion Dollars for Health Reform a Significant Threshold?
A
$1 trillion price tag for health care reform appears to be a
significant marker to many stakeholders and policymakers in the reform
debate, but less so to the public. When asked if $1 trillion over ten
years was too much, too little, or about right to spend on reform,
roughly four in ten of the public say it is too high (42%), while just
over a third say it is the right amount (36%), and one in ten say it is
too little (9%). Belief that $1 trillion is too much drops to about
three in ten when three separate arguments are tested on those who
initially say $1 trillion is too much.
Methodology The
survey was designed and analyzed by public opinion researchers at the
Kaiser Family Foundation and was conducted July 7 through July 14,
2009, among a nationally representative random sample of 1,205 adults
ages 18 and older. Telephone interviews conducted by landline (800)
and cell phone (405, including 126 who had no landline telephone) were
carried out in English and Spanish. The margin of sampling error for
the total sample is plus or minus 3 percentage points. For results
based on subgroups, the margin of sampling error is higher. |
The
full question wording, results, charts and a brief on the poll can be
viewed online.