Via Huffington Post/Pollster.com, the Kaiser Family Foundation's monthly health care poll finds support for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) among young adults. This quote from the Kaiser report captures the essence of the findings:
Even among younger adults – a group that many have speculated may be
resistant to getting coverage under the ACA – more than seven in ten
rate having health insurance as “very important,” and similar shares
feel it is something they need and that it is worth the money. Overall,
just a quarter of those ages 18-30 feel they are healthy enough to go
without insurance.
The young were not the only ones surveyed in this poll, however. Uninsured individuals, and individuals who personally had a pre-existing condition or a household member with one, ranging from 18-64 years old, were also interviewed (at 65, Medicare becomes available). Perhaps unsurprisingly, those currently uninsured have favorable views about health insurance. Households having a member with a pre-existing condition apparently are widespread: "The June survey finds that roughly half (49 percent) of adults under age
65 say they or someone in their household has a pre-existing condition..."
Kaiser also reported on its usual monthly measures among a full, nationally representative sample. On general feelings toward health care reform, more Americans report unfavorable (43%) than favorable (35%) views, as has usually been the case. Interestingly, even though the ACA has been law for more than three years -- and received heightened public attention during 2012 due to the Supreme Court challenge of the law and the presidential election -- the percent saying "don't know" (or refusing to answer) on the favorability/unfavorability item has been higher during 2013 than at any time during 2010-2012.
The survey also included an experimental component, comparing responses to the policy when interviewers referred to it either as the "Health Reform Law" or "Obamacare."
Finally, a combined 22% of Americans claim to have heard "some" or "a lot" about the upcoming health care exchanges in their states.
Monday, June 24, 2013
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Mellman on State of Obamacare Public Opinion
Via HuffPost/Pollster, Democratic pollster Mark Mellman offers his overview of where public opinion currently stands on the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare). Mellman cites figures of roughly 30% (Fox News poll) and 33% (CBS/New York Times poll) of Americans favoring full repeal of the ACA. These percentages, though far from a majority, are higher than the 25% of U.S. voters who favored repealing "all of it" in the 2012 exit polls.
Friday, November 9, 2012
Attitudes Toward ACA in the 2012 Exit Polls
The exit polling from last Tuesday's presidential election included an item assessing voters' attitudes toward the Affordable Care Act (health care reform). I was pleased to see that a four-option item was used, rather than a dichotomous retain/repeal item. Here are the results, from a screen capture I made (original source).
Consistent with previous findings when the question has been asked in this way, total repeal garnered the support of only one-quarter of respondents in the exit poll. Expansion of the law also received the support of roughly one-quarter of voters in the exit poll, a lower figure than had been obtained in previous polls.
It would have been great if the exit poll contained additional items probing which specific elements of the law people wanted to see repealed or what kind of new provisions people would have wanted to see added to the law. However, exit polls ask about many other areas (candidate preferences, demographics, positions on a wide range of issues), so it is understandable why there (apparently) were no further items on health care.
Not surprisingly, voters who favored leaving the ACA as is or expanding it went heavily for President Obama in the election, whereas those who favored repeal in whole or in part went heavily for the challenger, Mitt Romney.
The Kaiser Health News has summarized some of the additional reporting on voters' health care attitudes in connection with Tuesday's election.
Consistent with previous findings when the question has been asked in this way, total repeal garnered the support of only one-quarter of respondents in the exit poll. Expansion of the law also received the support of roughly one-quarter of voters in the exit poll, a lower figure than had been obtained in previous polls.
It would have been great if the exit poll contained additional items probing which specific elements of the law people wanted to see repealed or what kind of new provisions people would have wanted to see added to the law. However, exit polls ask about many other areas (candidate preferences, demographics, positions on a wide range of issues), so it is understandable why there (apparently) were no further items on health care.
Not surprisingly, voters who favored leaving the ACA as is or expanding it went heavily for President Obama in the election, whereas those who favored repeal in whole or in part went heavily for the challenger, Mitt Romney.
The Kaiser Health News has summarized some of the additional reporting on voters' health care attitudes in connection with Tuesday's election.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Public Opinion on the Supreme Court's Obamacare Ruling
With the U.S. Supreme Court having upheld the constitutionality of nearly all aspects of the Affordable Care Act yesterday, pollsters are now starting to gauge public opinion toward the Court's decision. I will start compiling the results of these polls below:
- Gallup (via Talking Points Memo, June 29): "Forty-six percent said the Court made the right decision, while 46 percent said the[y] disagreed with it."
- Reuters/Ipsos (via Political Wire, July 1): "Support for health care law rises after Court ruling."
- Kaiser Family Foundation (via Daily Kos, July 2): 56% say opponents of the law should "stop their efforts to block the law and move on to other national problems," whereas 38% say opponents should "continue trying to block the law from being implemented."
- CNN/Opinion Research (via Political Wire, July 2): "...American voters are evenly divided on last week's health care ruling, with 50% saying they agree with the Supreme Court's decision and 49% saying they disagree."
- Washington Post/ABC (via Political Wire, July 3): "A new Washington Post/ABC News poll finds Americans split on President Obama's health care law, with 45% in favor and 48% opposed."
- Quinnipiac (via Political Wire, July 12): "...voters agree by a 48% to 45% margin with [...] the U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding President Obama's health care law, while they say 49% to 43% that the Congress should repeal it." If one looks at the detailed report from Quinnipiac, however, one sees that the question this organization has always used to measure attitudes toward repealing the ACA presents a dichotomous yes/no format, without a middle-ground option such as repealing parts of the law and keeping others ("Do you think Congress should try to repeal the health care law, or should they let it stand?").
Friday, March 30, 2012
Advice from GOP Pollster David Hill
Republican pollster David Hill urges complete-repeal supporters to look beyond responses to dichotomous (yes/no) opinion-survey questions on jettisoning the 2010 health care reform law.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Talking Points Memo Urges Nuance
Talking Points Memo reviews recent polling on health care reform, finding that "the public’s opinion on health care reform is disparate, riddled with
qualifications and subject to change when new information is introduced.
And it turns out Americans don’t really hate it."
Monday, March 19, 2012
Poll on What Supreme Court Should Do in Upcoming Obamacare Case
A new Washington Post/ABC News poll shows greater opposition than support for the 2010 health care law, by a 52-41% margin. In addition to asking about overall support/opposition, the poll probed attitudes toward the individual-mandate aspect of the law, which is the central part of an upcoming U.S. Supreme Court hearing. One key question (as shown in this statistical report) asked the following:
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments about the health care law later this month. Of these three options, which would you prefer to have the Supreme Court do: 1) (uphold the entire law), 2) throw out the part of the law that requires individuals to have coverage and keep the rest of the law, or 3) (throw out the entire law)?
The results showed 42% of respondents (and by extension, of U.S. adults as a whole) wanting the Court to throw out the entire law, 25% wanting the individual mandate to be voided but the rest of the law upheld, and 26% in favor of upholding the entire law.
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments about the health care law later this month. Of these three options, which would you prefer to have the Supreme Court do: 1) (uphold the entire law), 2) throw out the part of the law that requires individuals to have coverage and keep the rest of the law, or 3) (throw out the entire law)?
The results showed 42% of respondents (and by extension, of U.S. adults as a whole) wanting the Court to throw out the entire law, 25% wanting the individual mandate to be voided but the rest of the law upheld, and 26% in favor of upholding the entire law.
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