Support for National Health Insurance Seven Years Into Massachusetts Healthcare Reform

Author:

Saluja Sonali1,Zallman Leah12,Nardin Rachel3,Bor David1,Woolhandler Steffie14,Himmelstein David U.14,McCormick Danny1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts, USA

2. Institute for Community Health, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

3. Department of Neurology, Cambridge Health Alliance, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts, USA

4. City University of New York, School of Public Health at Hunter College, New York, USA

Abstract

Before the Affordable Care Act (ACA), many surveys showed majority support for national health insurance (NHI), also known as single payer; however, little is currently known about views of the ACA's targeted population. Massachusetts residents have had seven years of experience with state health care reform that became the model for the ACA. We surveyed 1,151 adults visiting safety-net emergency departments in Massachusetts in late 2013 on their preference for NHI or the Massachusetts reform and on their experiences with insurance. Most of the patients surveyed were low-income and non-white. The majority of patients (72.0%) preferred NHI to the Massachusetts reform. Support for NHI among those with public insurance, commercial insurance, and no insurance was 68.9%, 70.3%, and 86.3%, respectively ( p < .001). Support for NHI was higher among patients dissatisfied with their insurance plan (83.3% vs. 68.9%, p = .014), who delayed medical care (81.2% vs. 69.6%, p < .001) or avoided purchasing medications due to cost (87.3% vs. 71.4%; p = .01). Majority support for NHI was observed in every demographic subgroup. Given the strong support for NHI among disadvantaged Massachusetts patients seven years after state health reform, a reappraisal of the ACA's ability to meet the needs of underserved patients is warranted.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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