|
E-mail this page to a friend!
Senior Citizen Opinions & Analysis
Would Americans Welcome Medicare if It Were Being
Proposed in 2009?
One of the ironies in all of this is that the
strongest critics of health care reform, and those most worried about
government involvement in health care, are seniors, who are satisfied
with their Medicare-provided health care
By Andrew Kohut, President,
Pew Research Center
Aug. 26, 2009 - Many Americans are balking again at
the prospect of health care reform. This is surprising in light of how
much
priority the public gave health care as an issue during the
presidential campaign, and how critical it was of President Bush's
failure to act on this issue. But after a few months of hearing about
it, a number of recent polls find the public divided over the health
care proposals being considered on Capitol Hill.
A late July Pew Research survey found
more opposition than support for the health care proposals before
Congress. Recent Gallup and NBC/WSJ surveys show the public about evenly
split over these proposals. And a CNN poll found a slight plurality
favoring "Barack Obama's" plan to reform health care.
As the contentious town hall meetings bear out, the
opponents of health care reform and those who are following the issue
most closely hold more intense feelings than do backers and those who
are less engaged.
The current highly divided climate of opinion about
changing the health care system raises the question: If Medicare was
being debated today would it be getting the same frosty reception that
we are seeing now -- and that we saw for health care reform in the
Clinton years?
To my mind, the answer is yes. Much of the
opposition to health care reform today is being fueled by
anti-government sentiment that did not exist during the mid-1960's.
A look back at the polling from 1964 and 1965 shows
the American public giving broad support to the idea of Medicare.
In January 1965, Gallup tested reactions to a
congressional plan calling for compulsory health insurance for the
elderly that would be financed out of increased Social Security taxes;
63% approved of this plan while just 28% disapproved.
Harris polling at the time found comparable levels
of public support for Medicare. In addition, Harris showed that, by 46%
to 36%, more Americans said they preferred "medical care for the aged
funded by Social Security taxes over a plan of expanded private health
insurance."
Public reactions are very different these days:
First, the polls show the public divided over the government
requiring all people to have health insurance.
Second, there is opposition to increasing taxes -- except on the
very wealthy -- to pay for insuring the uninsured.
Third, even before debate began, nearly half (46%) said in a Pew
Research survey they were
concerned about government getting too involved in health care,
despite their desire for the government to take up the issue.
By July, a Kaiser Family Foundation poll found 54%
worrying that the Congress and the president would pass a bill that will
not be good for them. Fewer (39%) worried that health care reform will
not pass this year.
Broad distrust of government -- which was not
evident in the 1960s -- is an important reason why Americans are
reacting so differently to health care reform in 2009 than they did in
1965.
In 1966, the National Election survey found, as in
four previous surveys starting in 1958, a large majority (65%) saying
they trusted the government in Washington to do the right thing just
about always or most of the time.
That majority held through the rest of the decade
but withered in the early 1970s. By 1974, just 36% of the public said
they trusted the government. And from that point on, pollsters have
never again found anything close to a majority of Americans saying they
trust Washington.
So when a CBS News/New York Times poll shows that
69% are concerned that the quality of their health care will worsen if
the government provides health care for everyone, credit a deep cynicism
and suspicion about government that even trumps confidence in President
Obama. More that anything else, proponents of reform have to overcome
distrust of government that was once only evident among Republicans,
but today is shared by most independents, and even some Democrats.
In addition, fully 65% in a recent Time poll say
they think health care reform is going to make things more complicated,
and 78% in an ABC News/Washington Post poll worry that their choice of
doctors will be limited. This is another reflection of distrust in
government playing out in the current health care debate -- opinions
that are significant challenges to proponents of reform.
One of the ironies in all of this is that the
strongest critics of health care reform, and those most worried about
government involvement in health care,
are seniors, who are satisfied with their Medicare-provided health
care.
Published August 19, 2009 by Pew Research Center
>>
Click here to original analysis and additional information at the Pew
Research Center for the People and the Press.
Click to More Senior News on the
Front Page
Copyright: SeniorJournal.com |