Tuesday, February 28, 2017
History of Polling on Government Health Insurance
The Roper Center's Kathleen Weldon briefly reviews the history of public opinion polling on government health-insurance programs, with a focus on the passage of Medicare.
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Confusion over "Obamacare" Nickname for Affordable Care Act
According to this report:
Roughly one-third of Americans don't know that Obamacare and the Affordable Care Act are the same thing, according to a recent poll.
The poll, conducted by Morning Consult and published by the New York Times, found that 35% of Americans either believe that Obamacare and the ACA are different policies (17%) or didn't know if they were (18%).
This is not the first time Morning Consult has delved into the matter of "what's in a name?" In 2014, it polled on attitudes toward Medicaid expansion, with and without mentioning that is was part of the Affordable Care Act.
I suppose one can conclude that attitudes on an issue are fairly robust when support for a position doesn't vary much, depending on whether or not labels for the policy are varied. Conversely, if support does vary considerably as a function of labels, then people are likely responding more to the entity mentioned in the label (e.g., the president who supported the legislation) than to the specific policy itself.
Roughly one-third of Americans don't know that Obamacare and the Affordable Care Act are the same thing, according to a recent poll.
The poll, conducted by Morning Consult and published by the New York Times, found that 35% of Americans either believe that Obamacare and the ACA are different policies (17%) or didn't know if they were (18%).
This is not the first time Morning Consult has delved into the matter of "what's in a name?" In 2014, it polled on attitudes toward Medicaid expansion, with and without mentioning that is was part of the Affordable Care Act.
I suppose one can conclude that attitudes on an issue are fairly robust when support for a position doesn't vary much, depending on whether or not labels for the policy are varied. Conversely, if support does vary considerably as a function of labels, then people are likely responding more to the entity mentioned in the label (e.g., the president who supported the legislation) than to the specific policy itself.
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