American public faced with reducing medical
services says healthcare costs can be cut
without added costs
Menlo Park, CA – As economic conditions
continue to worsen, the public is
increasingly worried about the affordability
and availability of care, with many
postponing or skipping treatments due to
cost in the past year and a notable minority
forced into serious financial straits due to
medical bills, according to the Kaiser
Family Foundation’s first health care
tracking poll of 2009.
In the face of the country’s current
economic challenges, the public’s support
for health reform remains strong and their
trust in President Obama to do the right
thing in health care reform is high.
Slightly more than half (53%) of Americans
say their household cut back on health care
due to cost concerns in the past 12 months.
The most common actions reported are relying
on home remedies and over-the-counter drugs
rather than visiting a doctor (35%) or
skipping dental care (34%).
Roughly one in
four report putting off health care they
needed (27%), one in five say they have not
filled a prescription (21%), and one in six
(15%) say they cut pills in half or skipped
doses to make their prescription last longer
(see chart).
“Experts and policymakers have multiple
agendas in health reform, but when half the
public reports skimping on care because they
can’t afford it, it’s very clear that what
the public wants most from health reform is
relief from health care costs,” said Kaiser
President and CEO Drew Altman.
The 27 percent of the public that reported
they had “put off or postponed getting
health care [they] needed” were asked about
the specific types of care they had
foregone.
The most common responses were
delaying going to the doctor for a temporary
illness (19%) or for preventive care (19%).
But nearly as many—16 percent—report putting
off care for a more serious problem, either
postponing a doctor’s visit related to a
chronic illness such as diabetes or delaying
major or minor surgery.
Not all medical care can be postponed,
however, and the survey indicates that
roughly one in five (19%) people experienced
serious financial problems recently due to
family medical bills.
Specifically, 13
percent say they have used up all or most of
their savings trying to pay off high medical
bills in the past 12 months, and just as
many say their medical debt means they have
difficulty paying other bills.
A similar
proportion (12%) say they have been
contacted by a collection agency, while a
smaller share (7%) report being unable to
pay for basic necessities like food, heat or
housing.
Beyond actual financial hardship due to
medical care, the survey also indicates a
rise in worries associated with health care
costs.
Nearly half of Americans (45%) report
they are “very” worried about having to pay
more for their health care or health
insurance, the highest proportion measured
in Kaiser polls since late 2006.
Roughly
four in 10 (38%) are very worried about
affording health care they need—a number
that rises to 56 percent among those who
believe someone in their household will lose
a job this year.
Fully one-third (34%) of those with health
coverage are worried they will lose it.
While these concerns are prevalent among
low-income Americans, one-third of
households earning between $30,000 and
$75,000 per year are also “very worried”
about losing their health care benefits.
Support for Action on Health Care Reform
Strong, But High Expectations Pose Challenge
The share of Americans who say that the
country’s economic problems make it more
important than ever to take on health care
reform has remained remarkably stable over
the past five months at roughly six in 10
(62%).
However, the partisan divide also
remains large with Democrats overwhelmingly
(79%) saying reform is more important than
ever and most Republicans (58%) saying the
nation cannot afford to tackle health care
reform at this point. Independents tilt the
balance by being in favor of reform now
(57%).
Health care continues to rank as one of the
top issues on the nation’s policy agenda.
The economy dominates (71%) the public’s
priorities for the president and Congress,
followed by making Medicare and Social
Security more financially sound (49%)—a new
issue added to the list this month.
Terrorism (42%) and health care (39%) rank
third and fourth.
Interestingly, while the majority of
Americans view action on health reform as
more important than ever and believe reform
would be good for the country as a whole
(59%), fewer think it would personally
benefit them or their family (39%).
A
plurality (43%) of Americans do not expect
to be personally impacted by reform and a
small minority (11%) think they would be
worse off.
“Far more people see themselves directly
benefiting from health reform and far fewer
see themselves being negatively affected
than we saw in the Clinton health reform
debate.
Today’s economic anxieties have
created a better starting point for health
reform than we saw last time around,” said
Dr. Altman.
While health reform remains popular, the
public has high expectations for how easily
reform might be achieved.
A majority (58%)
of Americans say that if policymakers made
the right changes, they could reform health
care “without spending more money to do it.”
This majority view is shared across
political party identification, age group
and income level.
"A majority (56%) of the
public also believes that the health system
can be reformed “without changing the
existing health care arrangements of people
like yourself.”
Seven in 10 Americans (72%) have a “great
deal” or “fair amount” of trust in President
Obama “to do or recommend the right thing
for health care reform,” giving him a 12
percentage point lead over the next most
trusted actor in health care reform.
Following Obama on the list of trusted
players are doctors’ organizations (60%),
Democratic leaders in Congress (57%) and
AARP (57%).
When Americans hear policymakers talk about
health care reform, they predominantly are
thinking about cost and coverage.
When asked what “health care reform” means
to them, 40 percent of the public respond
with a cost concern – people paying less for
care, care being more affordable, or
lowering the prices of medical goods such as
prescription drugs.
Just as many (39%) describe reform as
providing insurance to more people or
helping the uninsured.
Quality or delivery system reform did not
leap to the minds of Americans with only
nine percent mentioning it in their
responses.