Home Up Alliance Raps Force AARP Sellout Alliance Outraged Avoid Bait & Switch Avoid Web Site Beholden Medicare Buyers Beware Bush Plan Rapped Bush Misuses Program Canadian Drugs Safe Call for Vote Canadian Option Canadian View Card Confusion Congressman Gutknecht Leads Costs to Increase Cutting Back Draft of Law Drug Costs to Soar Drug Card Concerns Drug Card Do-Over Drug Companies Rally Drug Firms Buy Influence Drugs from Canada Editorial Fallout Elders Be Aware Elderly Don't Benefit Elderly Drug $ Increase Enrollment Truth Expensive Sale Extension Urged FDA, Customs Pharma Tools FDA Stories Mislead First Part D Fraud grandma_drug_smuggler.htm GOP and Drug Industry Group Raps Bush Immoral Bill? Lack of Support No Plan D Savings Legalize Canada Drugs Lost Research $ Many Skip Signup Millions at Risk Minnesota Seeks Delay Move Part D Negative Impact No Rx for Seniors Part D Backfires Part D Cards Fail Part D Delay Call Part D Farce Part D Hurts WI Srs. Part D on Hold? Part D Prices Higher Part D Site Rapped Part D Rapped Part D SNAFU Pharma DC Influence Partial Extension Plans Announced Plans Drop Coverage Prescription Freedom Prescription Prices to Increase Prescription Drug Prices Soar Price Jump Criticized Profits over People Public Raps Pharma Record Drug Price Increase Reject Monopolies Seniors Balk Seniors Confused Secrecy Decried Seniors Fear Debacle Seniors Still Unsure Seniors Unsure Part D Slow Enrollment States Reimbursed? States Resist Payments Task Force Report Vital Drugs CutCopyright (c) America's Seniors/ TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
Contact
us at America's Seniors/ TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com |
Lowering Health Costs a top priority for U.S. Public,
73 percent
favor reimportation
of prescription drugs from Canada
Lowering Health Care Costs Overall Seen as Top U.S. Health
Priority
Washington, D.C. – An overwhelming majority of the U.S. public
favors reimportation of prescription drugs from Canada as
one of the 12 health care priorities it believes President Bush and
Congress should address this year.
The new post-election survey conducted by the Kaiser Family
Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health showed 73 percent
favor reimportation as a way to lower prescription drug costs. At
the top of the list, almost two thirds (63%) of U.S. adults cite
lowering the costs of health care and health insurance as a top
priority for the President and Congress, followed by making Medicare
more fiscally sound for the future (58%) and increasing the number
of Americans with health insurance (57%).
Just over a quarter (26%) of the public cite reducing malpractice
jury awards as a top priority for the President and Congress,
ranking 11th on the list, just ahead of increasing federal funding
for stem cell research (21%). Just under a third (31%) cite allowing
drugs to be imported from Canada as a top priority, ranking eighth
on the priority list.
Overall, U.S. adults rank health care issues third when asked to
name the single most important priority for the President and
Congress to address. Fewer Americans cite health care issues (10%)
than the war in Iraq (27%) or economic issues (17%).
Terrorism/national security (10%) tied with health care as the
third-most cited issue. The survey is based on a nationally
representative sample of 1,396 adults and was conducted from Nov.
4-28, 2004.
Malpractice reforms
The survey finds that the public sees malpractice lawsuits as a
significant factor in rising health care costs and generally sees
the number of lawsuits as a bigger problem than the size of jury
awards.
“The public isn’t pushing hard for malpractice reform, but will be
happy to have it if the lawyers, doctors, Administration and
Congress can agree to a plan,” Foundation President Drew E. Altman,
Ph.D., said.
Almost a third (32%) of people say that the most important factor in
causing rising malpractice insurance rates is too many lawyers
filing unwarranted lawsuits, while 15% say it is the high profits of
malpractice insurers, 14% say it is too many patients making
unwarranted claims against doctors, and 11% say it is too many
doctors making mistakes. While most of the policy debate has focused
on putting caps on jury awards, 9% cite “too many juries making
excessive awards” as the most important reason malpractice costs are
rising.
More than seven in 10 (72%) people say they would favor legislation
to prohibit people from filing medical malpractice lawsuits unless a
qualified independent medical specialist reviewed the claim and
thought it was reasonable. More than six in 10 (63%) say they would
favor legislation that would limit the amount of money that can be
awarded as damages for pain and suffering to someone suing a doctor
for malpractice.
Among the 63% who support a cap on damages for pain and suffering,
most favor a relatively high cap; 30% of this group favors a cap of
$1 million or higher, 23% favor a $500,000 cap, 16% favor a $250,000
cap, and 15% favor a cap of less than $250,000. (The remaining 17%
say they either don’t know or wouldn’t say what cap they would
favor.)
Most of the public also believe that both damage caps and requiring
independent medical review would have at least some impact on the
overall cost of health care in the United States. About seven in 10
say that a law limiting pain and suffering awards would help a lot
(32%) or some (37%) in reducing the overall cost of health care,
while a quarter (25%) say it would not help much or not at all.
Similarly, about three-quarters say that a law requiring independent
medical review of claims would help a lot (32%) or some (43%) in
lowering overall health costs, while about a quarter (23%) say it
would not help much or not at all.
Republicans (37%) are more likely than Democrats (17%) to say that
reducing jury awards in malpractice lawsuits should be a top
priority, and they are also more likely to favor various malpractice
reforms and to think that these reforms would help in reducing the
overall cost of health care in the U.S.
Health
care costs
Lowering the cost of health care and insurance was named as a top
priority for the President and Congress by 63% of the public, and by
an equal share of Republicans (61%) and Democrats (61%). Asked about
the causes of rising health care costs, 29% of Americans say that
high profits made by drug and insurance companies are the most
important factor, while 22% say the number of malpractice lawsuits
and 15% say the amount of greed and waste that occurs in the health
care system. In comparison, 7% cite the costs of medical technology
and drugs, a factor many health care experts cite as a major driver
of higher health care costs.
Specific proposals to lower prescription drug costs
The survey finds that the public continues to support two prominent
policy proposals for lowering the cost of prescription drugs:
allowing the importation of drugs from Canada, and having the
federal government negotiate with drug companies for lower
prescription drug prices for people with Medicare.
Almost three quarters (73%) say they favor changing the law to allow
Americans to buy prescription drugs imported from Canada if they
think they can get a lower price, with nearly as many (69%) agreeing
that the change would make medicines more affordable without
sacrificing safety or quality. Seven in 10 (70%) disagree that
allowing imported drugs from Canada would lead U.S. drug companies
to do less research and development, and more than half (57%)
disagree that it would expose Americans to unsafe medicines from
other countries.
Eight in 10 (80%) say they favor changing the law to allow the
federal government to use its buying power to negotiate with drug
companies to try to get a lower price for prescription drugs for
people with Medicare.
Majorities say that such a change would make medicines more
affordable for people on Medicare (77%), and that it makes sense
because the government already negotiates prices for the Departments
of Defense and Veterans Affairs (67%). While 54% say such a change
will mean government price controls on prescription drugs, a smaller
share (29%) say it would lead U.S. drug companies to do less
research and development.
Majorities also believe that each of these measures would provide at
least some help in reducing prescription drug costs overall. More
than three-quarters say that allowing Americans to buy prescription
drugs imported from Canada would help a lot (33%) or some (44%) in
reducing prescription drug costs in the United States, while 18% say
it would not help much or not at all. Similarly, eight in 10 say
that allowing the federal government to negotiate with drug
companies for lower drug prices for people on Medicare would help a
lot (28%) or some (53%) in reducing prescription drug costs, while
17% say it would not help much or not at all.
“People are really worried about their drug costs, and they want the
government to do something about it,” said Robert J. Blendon, Sc.D.,
Professor of Health Policy at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Expanding health coverage for the uninsured
The public places a relatively high priority on increasing the
number of Americans with health insurance. More than half (57%) cite
the issue as a top health care priority for the President and
Congress – making it the third most-cited health-care priority
behind lowering health-care costs and making Medicare more
financially sound for the future.
However, the public does not agree on a single best approach and is
relatively evenly divided on a number of potential policy
approaches. When asked to choose their most preferred option to
increase the number of Americans with health insurance, 23% say
offering businesses tax deductions or other financial assistance to
help them provide health insurance to their employees, while 17% say
offering tax deductions or other financial assistance to help
individuals pay for private insurance and 17% say expanding state
government programs such as Medicaid. Smaller shares (between 12%
and 15%) say they most prefer other options, such as a national
government health plan, expanding Medicare to cover people under age
65, and requiring businesses to offer health insurance for their
employees.
Americans are also divided on whether they are willing to pay more,
either in taxes or in higher health insurance premiums, to expand
coverage to the uninsured – with 51% saying they would not be
willing to pay more, and 45% saying they would be willing to pay
more. Another 4% were unsure. Democrats (59%) are significantly more
likely to be willing to pay more than Republicans (36%).
Findings on other key health topics
-
The
survey finds that seniors remain significantly more likely to
say they have an unfavorable (46%) than a favorable (29%) view
of the Medicare law enacted in December 2003, while one in four
(25%) say that they don’t know enough to offer an opinion. Seven
in 10 seniors (70%) say that lawmakers in Washington should work
to fix problems in the law. Much smaller numbers favor repealing
the law (12%) or leaving the law as is (16%). These numbers are
essentially unchanged from the results of a July 2004 survey of
people with Medicare.
-
When
asked about the term “health savings account,” three in 10 U.S.
adults (30%) say they have heard the term and know what it
means, while another 17% have heard the term and don’t know what
it means, and more than half (53%) say they have not heard the
term. Four percent of the public overall say they are currently
enrolled in a health savings account.
-
At a time
when there is growing debate about employer-based health
insurance, the survey finds that the public is still attached to
this system to which it has become accustomed. Three-quarters
(75%) of the public say that most people would be better off if
they got their health insurance through their employer, compared
with 17% who say they would be better off purchasing their own
policy. Among those with employer-sponsored coverage, half (50%)
say they would prefer to have their employer pay for their
insurance at work, while just 8% say they would rather have
their employer give them the cash to buy a policy on their own
(40% say it wouldn’t make much difference).
|
Home Up About Us America's Seniors WebMall Aging News California Report Caregiving Community/Workplace Fitness,Health Election 2008 Grandparents Health Care Policy Hispanic Seniors Medicare News Contents/Sitemap Prescription Drugs Pharma Suits Restaurant Reviews Rural Seniors Safety & Security Growing New Parts Seniors Commentary Seniors' Entertainment Seniors Headlines Seniors Finances Seniors' Issues Seniors Relationships Seniors Rights Social Security News The Virtual Family Travel News TSN Radio on Web Veterans' Tribute White House Cards Privacy Policy Sitemap Contents Consumer Alert Pull Plug Heat Costs |