New Study: Millennials Consider Healthcare Top Priority, Wary of Trump’s Impact
Even as millennials withdraw from some of the habits and behaviors associated with their parents, such as home ownership, cable TV and physical banking, there is one area where the generation follows traditional expectations: healthcare.
Millennials highly value healthcare and are surprisingly traditional in the way they consume it, according to a new study by the
Health Insurance More Essential Than Internet
BSG found that, of the 86% of millennials with health insurance, more than half get it through avenues expanded by Obamacare, such as individual plans, their parent's plan or
Ranks as No. 1 Employee Benefit
Millennials, who recently overtook baby boomers as the largest segment of the workforce, want traditional job benefits, and health insurance tops the list. When asked if they'd rather have better insurance or a 10% pay raise, 51% opted for the insurance while 49% chose the money. Millennials also ranked health insurance first out of nine possible employee benefits, followed by retirement account contributions and vacation. Parking and gym memberships ranked lowest. [See Chart 3].
"Prioritizing security-oriented benefits suggests millennials take a more thoughtful and cautious view of the future than they are often credited for in the media," said BSG Managing Partner
Experience with System Breeds Distrust
Though millennials are happy with their insurance and 60% are favorable toward Obamacare, they're concerned about the system. Forty-nine percent believes the
Pessimism Abounds with Trump
The millennial generation neither trusts President
Most also expect their health insurance options to deteriorate under Trump – 47% of millennials believe they'll get worse, 31% believe they'll improve and 22% believe they'll remain the same. [See Chart 5]. Similarly, 44% of millennials expect Trump's eventual plan to repeal and replace Obamacare will undermine healthcare quality, compared to 35% who said it will improve and 21% who said it will stay the same. [See Chart 6].
"Even though most millennials do not expect healthcare improvements from the Trump administration, they still place a high value on health insurance and care about what happens to the system," said Franklin. "Policymakers who jeopardize millennials' insurance options risk alienating this younger set of voters and that could carry long-term political consequences."
Traditional Approach to Healthcare for Untraditional Generation
In spite of being the most connected generation, the
The full report can be accessed at: http://www.bsgco.com/insights/millennials-sound-off-on-healthcare
Methodology
The 2017 Millennials and Healthcare Study was conducted online by
Survey Demographics
Among the 1,002 respondents, 49% percent were male and 51% were female. Forty three percent consider themselves independents, 35%
About
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Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/new-study-millennials-and/healthcare-insurance/prweb14181126.htm



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