HEALTH PROVISIONS AMONG PUBLICS TOP PRIORITIES FOR ECONOMIC STIMULUS
HEALTH REFORM RATED AMONG TOP
PRIORITIES FOR NEW PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS, INSURANCE REGULATIONS STAND OUT FOR
BROAD BIPARTISAN SUPPORT
Initial Positive Reaction to Many Key
Elements of Health Reform, But Support Could Erode During a Debate About
Tradeoffs
Washington, DC The public ranks action on health care highly as
part of efforts to stem the impact of the economic recession and also views
reforming health care as one of the top priorities for President-elect Obama
and Congress, according to a new national survey
conducted by researchers from the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard
School of Public Health.
Americans rank helping the newly unemployed afford health insurance coverage
second (picked by 33% as a top priority) behind helping businesses keep or
create jobs (45%). Providing states with more federal help to
pay for health care of lower income residents ranks third (picked by 31%).
These proposed health provisions of the stimulus package ranked ahead of
repairing the countrys infrastructure, cutting taxes for the middle class,
helping people pay their mortgages (each picked by 27%), and helping large
businesses hurt by the recession (13%).
While improving the economy is overwhelmingly Americans top priority for the
new president and Congress cited by nearly three-quarters (73%) of the public
over four in ten (43%) Americans view reforming health care as a top concern,
ranking it third just behind fighting terrorism (48%) and above reducing the
federal budget deficit (39%), improving public schools (37%), working to create
more clean energy sources (36%) and dealing with Iraq (35%). A solid majority
of Americans (61%) believe that given the serious economic problems facing the
country, it is more important than ever to take on health reform now.
As Congress begins work on the reauthorization of the State Childrens Health
Insurance Program (SCHIP), half (51%) of the public favors increasing spending
on SCHIP, while four in ten (39%) would maintain current program funding.
The economic crisis has created an unprecedented window of opportunity for
health reform. But we are in the early happy talk stage on health reform, and
the window could close if policymakers cannot move fairly quickly to take
advantage of the opportunity they have, said Kaiser President and CEO Drew
Altman.
Large majorities of Americans say coverage expansion, cost reduction and
delivery system change are all important pieces of health care reform. But when
asked to choose which of these sometimes competing goals is most important,
affordability tops the priority list, named by four in ten (39%). Slightly
fewer three in ten (30%) choose expanding coverage and roughly two in ten
(18%) pick improving the quality and cost-effectiveness of the health care
delivery system.
Clear and Bipartisan Support for
Regulation
A key health reform idea that draws public support and
stands out in the support it gets across the political spectrum is the idea of
more consumer protections and regulation of health insurance.
Almost eight in ten Americans (78%) favor requiring health insurance companies
to cover anyone who applies, even if they have a pre-existing condition. This
support remains high (72%) even when the public is given the argument often
made that such a change may raise health insurance costs for healthier people
even as it lowers them for the less healthy. Support is bipartisan: a clear
majority of Democrats (77%), political independents (78%) and Republicans (58%)
support eliminating exclusions for preexisting conditions.
Similarly, over six in ten Americans strongly or somewhat favor limiting the
administrative expenses health insurance companies can claim (65%) and even the
profits these companies can earn (62%). These proposals garner support across
party identification as well, with majorities of Democrats (71%), political
independents (59%) and Republicans (55%) backing government limits on health
insurance company profits.
Roughly half the public believes there is not enough government regulation of
health care costs (51%) or the price of prescription drugs (52%). When examined
by political identification, a majority of Democrats (61%) and political
independents (52%) think there is not enough regulation of health care costs,
while just under four in ten (37%) Republicans think similarly.
We can see the framework of a winning package of health reform proposals from
the publics perspective, said Robert J. Blendon,
professor of health policy and political analysis at the Harvard School of
Public Health. But the reality is that there are some key distinct differences
among partisans that will pose a challenge to policymakers, he added.
The Devil is in the Details and the
Financing and the Partisan Divide
One of the key questions of health care reform is how to pay for it. The survey
suggests that, as has long been the case, the public is split down the middle
in its willingness to sacrifice financially in order to cover more individuals:
roughly half (49%) say they are not willing to pay higher insurance premiums or
taxes, while a similar percentage (47%) say they are. There are big partisan
differences here, with most Democrats (59%) saying they are willing to pay,
most Republicans unwilling to pay (67%), and independents divided (49% willing,
47% unwilling).
When offered a list of potential taxes that could be used to pay for expanding
health insurance for the uninsured, the only options with majority support were
those likely to impact the fewest people, in particular, smokers and the
wealthy. Roughly seven in ten (72%) strongly or somewhat favor increasing the
cigarette tax, increasing taxes for people from families earning more than
$250,000 per year (70%), or repealing current income tax cuts for those earning
more than $250,000 per year (61%).
The survey also suggests that as in the past early support for a number of
reform proposals could fade in the face of arguments that opponents might raise
in a public debate. For example, seven in ten Americans (71%) say they favor
the idea of employer mandates. But when given the argument often made by
critics that this may cause some employers to lay off some workers support
falls dramatically, to just under three in ten (29%). The same pattern holds on
the topic of individual mandates. Roughly two in three (67%) favor requiring
all Americans to have health insurance with help for those who could not afford
it. When given the criticism that some people may be required to buy health
insurance they find too expensive or do not want, support falls to two in ten
(19%).
Americans seem most concerned that any health care plan not raise their costs
or involve government limiting or dictating their choices. According to the
survey, nearly two-thirds (65%) say they would be less likely to support a plan
that would get the government get too involved in personal health care
decisions, more than six in ten (61%) would be less likely to support a plan
that increases peoples insurance premiums or out-of-pocket costs, and more
than half (56%) would be less supportive of a plan that limits an individuals
choice in doctors.
As we have learned from past debates, public support looms for health reform
largest at the beginning of the debate, but it's relatively easy to chip away at
that support with arguments about tradeoffs, said Mollyann
Brodie, Kaiser vice president and director for Public
Opinion and Survey Research.
Any debate over health reform options will also involve negotiating the very
different views of rank and file Democrats and Republicans. Democrats are
significantly more likely to place a priority on action on health care, which
ranks second on their priority agenda (61% say it is a top priority), compared
to Republicans, who rank it eighth (23%). More than three-quarters (77%) of
Democrats think health reform is more important than ever due to the economy,
while six in ten (62%) Republicans believe the nation cannot afford to take on
health reform now. Democrats are more likely to favor a big push on coverage,
and as noted above, more willing to pay for it. The partisan divide on spending
also extends to SCHIP: more than six in ten (62%) Democrats and a majority
(55%) of political independents want to see the Congress and President-elect
Obama increase spending on the program, while less than three in ten (29%)
Republicans would agree.
Publics Other Favored Health Policy
Priorities
While reforming the nations health care system is on the mind of Americans,
they also approve of other ideas to alter federal health care policy or
spending. Allowing the federal government to use its buying power to negotiate
lower prescription prices with drug companies is the most popular proposal in
the survey supported by nine in ten (90%). Eight in ten (79%) favor filling the
Medicare prescription drug coverage gap known as the doughnut hole. Nearly two-thirds (64%) of the public support spending more on
medical care for veterans.
The survey results are available online. A webcast
of todays Washington
briefing where the survey was released will be available there later today.
Methodology
The Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard School
of Public Health Survey, The Publics Health Care
Agenda for the New President and Congress, was designed
and analyzed by researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard School
of Public Health. The Kaiser/Harvard survey research team included Drew E.
Altman, Ph.D., Mollyann Brodie,
Ph.D., and Claudia Deane, M.A. from the Kaiser Family Foundation; and Professor
Robert Blendon, Sc.D., and John Benson, M.A. of the
Harvard School of Public Health.
The survey was conducted December 4-14, 2008 among a nationally representative
random sample of 1,628 adults ages 18 and over. Telephone interviews were
carried out in English and Spanish by ICR/International Communications
Research. The margin of sampling error for results based on the full sample is
plus or minus 3 percentage points. For results based on smaller subsets of
respondents the margin of sampling error is somewhat higher. Note that sampling
error is only one of many potential sources of error in this or any other
public opinion poll. Values less than 0.5% are indicated by an asterisk (*).
Vol. indicates that a response was volunteered by respondent, not an
explicitly offered choice. Percentages may not always add up to 100% due to
rounding.
The Kaiser Family Foundation is a non-profit private
operating foundation, based in Menlo
Park, California,
dedicated to producing and communicating the best possible information,
research and analysis on health issues.
Harvard School of Public Health is dedicated to advancing
the public's health through learning, discovery, and communication.
More than 400 faculty members are engaged in teaching and training the
1,000-plus student body in a broad spectrum of disciplines crucial to the
health and well being of individuals and populations around the world. Programs
and projects range from the molecular biology of AIDS vaccines to the
epidemiology of cancer; from risk analysis to violence prevention; from
maternal and children's health to quality of care measurement; from health care
management to international health and human rights. For more
information on the school visit http://www.hsph.harvard.edu.