Feature

Survey: Americans support Medicare for all


 

A majority of Americans support the concept of Medicare for all, but “larger majorities favor more incremental changes to the health care system,” according to a new survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Public attitudes on Medicare and Medicaid expansion proposals

Support for a Medicare-for-all health care system came in at 56% (strongly favor, 34%; somewhat favor, 22%) among the 1,190 respondents to the latest KFF Health Tracking Poll, which was conducted Jan. 9-14, 2019. That support came largely from Democrats, 81% of whom favored the plan, compared with only 23% of Republicans, the Kaiser investigators said Jan. 23.

A Medicare buy-in plan for Americans aged 50-64 years also was highly popular, receiving support from 77% of all respondents – 85% of Democrats, 75% of Independents, and 69% of Republicans. Support by party identification was similar for a proposal to enable all those who don’t have employer-based insurance to get coverage through state Medicaid programs, which received 75% support overall, they reported.

Just behind those proposals at 74% support was a federally administered health plan that would be open to anyone but would allow people to keep the coverage they have. It was the most popular proposal among Democrats (91%) but did not garner a majority among Republicans (47%), the investigators said.

Support for the Medicare-for-all plan varied considerably, depending on number of arguments presented to respondents. When told that such a proposal would guarantee insurance as a right for all Americans, 71% favored it, and when they heard that it would eliminate health insurance premiums and reduce out-of-pockets costs, 67% of respondents expressed support. Favorable responses, however, were in the minority when people were told that Medicare-for-all would eliminate private health insurance companies (37%), threaten the current Medicare program (32%), and lead to some delayed medical tests and treatments (26%), according to the Kaiser report.

Recommended Reading

AAP guidance: How to ask about military service
MDedge Cardiology
Think outside lower body for pelvic pain
MDedge Cardiology
Deep sleep decreases, Alzheimer’s increases
MDedge Cardiology
New or existing drugs? Both fuel price inflation
MDedge Cardiology
Phone etiquette, part 2
MDedge Cardiology
Mandatory reporting laws
MDedge Cardiology
GoFundMe CEO: ‘Gigantic gaps’ in health system showing up in crowdfunding
MDedge Cardiology
Revised ACA premium calculator could up uninsured rate
MDedge Cardiology
Gametes for back pain, Alice in Wonderland syndrome, and liver-saving beer
MDedge Cardiology
Trump zeroes in on surprise medical bills in White House chat with patients, experts
MDedge Cardiology