Gallup: The Challenge Of Healthcare Reform
Do
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Trends in Americans' Perceptions of Their Healthcare Are Mixed
As my colleague
Other trends are more stable. Americans' views of the cost of healthcare and healthcare coverage, both nationally and personally, are roughly where they have been. Ratings of the healthcare industry per se are slightly above the two-decade average, although still well below the average for all other business sectors rated.
Few Americans (1%-3% over Gallup's past seven surveys) mention healthcare as the nation's top problem, and the percentage who say the
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Regardless of Trends, Evaluations of the Current Situation Show Problems
Gallup data show that Americans' current ratings of their personal healthcare situations are on the positive side of the majority line, including a 72% excellent or good rating for personal healthcare quality, a 66% excellent or good rating for personal healthcare coverage, and 56% who are satisfied with personal healthcare costs.
Even though these are generally positive numbers, simple mathematics shows that substantial percentages of Americans remain concerned about their healthcare quality, coverage or cost. Plus, as noted, almost four in 10 Americans -- a not-insignificant number -- have put off medical treatment because of cost.
Additionally, Americans, as is the case across many domains, are clearly more negative when asked about healthcare "out there" across the country. For example, 76% of Americans are dissatisfied with the cost of healthcare in the
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Other Measures Illuminate Problems
Other measures signal continuing problems with
In other words, America's return on its huge monetary investment in healthcare is suboptimal.
The COVID-19 pandemic, of course, engendered a major review of shortcomings in the American healthcare system, and healthcare access and quality remain inequitably distributed across subgroups of the population. Recent news headlines have pointed to problems with availability of pediatric hospital beds; nurses who are dissatisfied and have gone on strike; and the impact of respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, on highlighting severe shortages in emergency room capacities.
Plus, although healthcare is not top of mind as the country's No. 1 problem,
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The Seemingly Simple Solution of "Medicare for All" Is Problematic In the Public's View
One seemingly simple solution for healthcare problems is the single-payer, "Medicare for All" program advanced by such leaders as Sen.
As my colleague
Putting responses to these two questions together, we find that only 38% of Americans adopt the position Sanders espouses -- that the government's role is to ensure that everyone has healthcare coverage and that the government should run the system. Another 35% of Americans adopt the opposite views, believing both that the nation should use a private insurance system and that it is not the government's role to ensure healthcare for all to begin with. And 18% of Americans believe that the government should ensure that everyone has insurance, but that this should be accomplished through private insurance, not a government-run system.
The takeaway here: The majority of Americans recognize that government has a role in expanding health insurance coverage, but many are ambivalent about fulfilling that role with a government-run system.
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Learning From History -- The Affordable Care Act
Reforming healthcare is not a new idea. Efforts to fix healthcare have extended back for decades -- including most significantly the creation of Medicare and Medicaid in President
Most recently, we saw the major focus on healthcare reform in the first years of the
Public-opinion-wise, a slight majority of Americans continue to support the ACA, according to
And Gallup's tracking shows only a very modest uptick after ACA enactment in Americans' positive ratings of their personal healthcare coverage (68% excellent or good from 2001-2010 versus 69% from 2011-2022) and satisfaction with healthcare costs (58.3% satisfied in the years before ACA passage versus 59.6% afterward).
The
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Learning from History --
Also of historical note is the major effort to reform healthcare in the first years of the Bill Clinton administration. Under the direction of first lady
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Reform Needs to Involve the People
There are presumably numerous causes of the Clinton administration's failure to reform healthcare, including the health insurance industry-funded "Harry and Louise" commercials that succeeded in casting doubt on the proposal.
But of particular relevance to any future efforts to reform healthcare, well-known pollster
Yankelovich's insights provide important food for thought. If and when a new committee, task force, or advisory group is put together to grapple with healthcare reform in this country, a primary consideration should be to more directly involve the American people themselves in the process. This builds from the conclusion that major societal reforms ultimately must work in the real world. Theoretical justifications for healthcare reform fail if they don't fly with the people of the society who are most directly affected. And, there is substantial wisdom in the collective views of the people, often outweighing the wisdom of presumed experts.
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Defining Healthcare Reform Objectives
Any major effort to achieve societal goals must also have a well-defined objective. Two frequently cited examples of what a society can accomplish -- the
The objectives for healthcare reform are less straightforward. But one major (and measurable) metric that can be used to measure success, it seems to me, is the views of Americans themselves, and how they feel about healthcare costs, coverage and quality. People are the end consumers of healthcare and the target toward whom all this effort is focused. Therefore, it makes sense to include the attitudes of the people themselves as a major objective or goal for any healthcare reform process.
Gallup CEO
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Original text here: https://news.gallup.com/opinion/polling-matters/468893/challenge-healthcare-reform.aspx
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