Public Opinion
Polling Suggest Health Care Reform is Still Key to Economic Recovery: Recent polling on health care reform
shows mixed reaction among the public over the proposed legislation.
According to a recent CNN poll, 48 percent of those questioned said
lawmakers should work on an entirely new bill and 25 percent felt that
Congress should stop work on health care reform altogether.
According
to the monthly poll from the nonpartisan Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, 75 percent of Americans still think it's important that
Obama include health care reform in addressing the nation's economic crisis, while many still harbor doubts about the legislation.
When asked how health care legislation relates to their economic situation:
* Nearly 31 percent said they thought the Democratic bills would make
their personal financial situation worse, compared with 10 percent who
said it would improve their family budgets.
* Forty-two percent said
the nation's fiscal condition would suffer because of the legislation,
compared with 26 percent who said it would get better.
* Americans
were divided on whether the Democrats' approach would improve overall
access to health care around the country, with 35 percent saying it
would and nearly that many disagreeing.
Health Insurance Coverage Varies Widely Based on Age: Coming just before the President's Summit on Health Care Reform, a newly released Gallup Poll reinforces the wide degree of variability in health insurance coverage
across U.S. population segments, especially when it comes to age.
Eighty-four percent of 18-year-olds have health insurance, most likely
because they are still covered under their parents' policies. By age 22,
health insurance coverage reaches its lowest point, with just 66
percent maintaining coverage. From age 22 on, the percentage of
Americans with health insurance begins to climb, albeit slowly, reaching
the 95 percent level at age 65 when Medicare becomes an option.
Looking Ahead
Legislators need to determine next steps for health care legislation coming out of the President's Health Care Reform
Summit. On Wednesday, Department of Health and Human Services Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius invited executives from the top five insurance
companies to meet at HHS to discuss their companies' insurance premiums.
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