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AP Poll: Americans fret over health overhaul costs

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR and TREVOR TOMPSON
,
AP
posted: 84 DAYS 21 HOURS AGO
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WASHINGTON -It's the cost, Mr. President. Americans are worried about hidden costs in the fine print of health care overhaul legislation, an Associated Press poll says. That's creating new challenges for President Barack Obama as he tries to close the deal with a handful of Democratic doubters in the Senate.
Although Americans share a conviction that major health care changes are needed, Democratic bills that extend coverage to the uninsured and try to hold down medical costs get no better than a lukewarm reception.
The poll found that 43 percent oppose the health care plans being discussed in Congress, while 41 percent are in support. An additional 15 percent remain neutral or undecided.
"Well, for one, I know nobody wants to pay taxes for anybody else to go to the doctor — I don't," said Kate Kuhn, 20, of Acworth, Ga. "I don't want to pay for somebody to use my money that I could be using for myself."
There's been little change in broad public sentiment about the overhaul plan from a 40-40 split in an AP poll last month, but not everyone's opinion is at the same intensity. Opponents have stronger feelings than do supporters. Seniors remain more skeptical than younger generations.
The latest survey was conducted by Stanford University with the nonprofit Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
When poll questions were framed broadly, the answers seemed to indicate ample support for Obama's goals. When required trade-offs were brought into the equation, opinions shifted — sometimes dramatically.
In one striking finding, the poll indicated that public support for banning insurance practices that discriminate against those in poor health may not be as solid as it seems.
A ban on denial of coverage because of pre-existing medical problems has been one of the most popular consumer protections in the health care debate. Some 82 percent said they favored the ban, according to a Pew Research Center poll in October.
In the AP poll, when told that such a ban would probably cause most people to pay more for health insurance, 43 percent said they would still support doing away with pre-existing condition denials, but 31 percent said they would oppose it.
Costs for those with coverage could go up because people in poor health who'd been shut out of the insurance pool would now be included, and they would get medical care they could not access before.
"I'm thinking we'd probably pay more because we would probably be paying for those that are not paying. So they got to get the money from somewhere. Basically I see our taxes going up," said Antoinette Gates, 57, of Atlanta.
The health care debate is full of such trade-offs. For example, limiting the premiums that insurance companies can charge 50-year-olds means that 20-year-olds have to pay more for coverage.
"These trade-offs really matter," says Robert Blendon, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health who follows opinion trends. "The legislation contains a number of features that polls have shown to be popular, but support for the overall legislation is less than might be expected because people are worried there are details about these bills that could raise their families' costs."
If the added costs — spread over tens of millions of people — turn out to be small, it may not make much difference, Blendon said. But if they're significant, Obama could be on shaky ground in the final stretch of his drive to deliver access to health insurance to most Americans.
More than 4 in 5 Americans now have health insurance, and their perceptions about costs are key as Obama tries to rally his party's congressional majority. In the House, Democrats came together to pass their bill. In the Senate, Democratic liberals and a smaller group of moderates disagree on core questions even as Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., prepares to take legislation to the floor.
The poll suggests the public is becoming more attuned to the fact that in health care, details can make all the difference.
For example, asked if everyone should be required to have at least some health insurance, 67 percent agreed and 27 percent said no.
The responses flipped when people were asked about requiring everybody to carry insurance or face a federal penalty: 64 percent said they would be opposed, while 28 percent favored that.
Both the House and Senate bills would require all Americans to get health insurance, either through an employer, a government program or by buying their own coverage. Subsidies would be provided for low-income people, as well as many middle-class households.
And there would also be a stick — a tax penalty to enforce the coverage mandate.
"I think it's crazy. I think it infringes on our rights as a citizen, forcing us to do these things," said Eli Fuchs, 26, of Marietta, Ga.
Among Democrats, only 12 percent oppose the broad goal of requiring insurance. But 50 percent oppose fines to enforce it.
The poll found a similar opinion shift on employer requirements: 73 percent agreed that all companies should be required to give their employees at least some health insurance.
Yet when asked if fines should be used to enforce such a requirement on medium and large companies, support dropped to 52 percent. Uninsured workers are concentrated in small companies.
The poll was based on land line and cell phone interviews with 1,502 adults from Oct. 29 to Nov. 8. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. The interviews were conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Media. Stanford University's participation was made possible by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a nonpartisan organization that conducts research on the health care system.
Associated Press Writer Ann Sanner contributed to this report
On the Net:
Interactive poll results: http://bit.ly/4D2bvB
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-11-17 10:46:06
COMMENTS ( 30 )
Page 1 of 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>
Vpqueen
2:47PM Nov 16 2009 
It was just announced that the government paid out $47 billion in suspect Medicare claims. You have to ask yourselves, if the government can't run Medicare properly, what makes anybody think they can run Obamacare? Post office? $7 billion in the red despite a recent rate increase. Social security? More dollars going out than currently coming in. Medicare? Headed for bankruptcy. Government deficit? Well over $1 trillion and rising. Amtrak? A perennial bailout boondoggle. Fannie Mae? Caused the mortagage meltdown that has put us where we are today. The definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.
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(1 RATINGS)
 
ATTL
2:13PM Nov 16 2009 
The cost issue is framed in a wrong way. Government will provide a basic healthcare policy to all and the cost will be shared by all. As for participation, it is up to the individual. Goverment will pay for part or entire private insurances up to what is provided and the rest will be the burden of the individual. This is what is operating now under Medicare and Medicaid and government employee insureances. That being said, if there are negatives, but we are not really seeing a wide spread outcries for those elders and government employees being served. The public is already paying for a good chunk of the healthcare costs under the government through out all kind of services. As for benefits, it is huge. It is universal, everybody and anywhere and anyplace and anytime. They will be nonprofit. No one is getting rich from fleecing the healthy and the sick. No one will have to balance health vs food and/or shelter. No one will go bankrupt because of health problem. The costs will be less with no profit and less administration for the system: the pharmacies, the insurers, the hospitals and drug industries. Will it kill the pharmaceutical and insurance companies? No, as in Germany, Japan, and Switzerland, it has shown that they are doing just fine. As matter of fact, that they refocused their energy on their products and services and not profit to grow. The world largest pharmaceutical companies are based in these counties. These are facts. Polls are numbers. What they reflect is really just our ignorance. The news organizations should focus on facts and issues, not popularity contests or political ideologies. Why all these counties have a national healtcare system and we do not. For example, not many articles tried to compare the current cost vs the projected cost of a national system. If the Congress really did their homework, they should have had analysed these other systems to build one of our own. Turn down the lobbiest and turn to their people and explain with facts not political ideology or rubbish. Same could be said for our news organizations.
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(1 RATINGS)
 
Jrmag44
1:15PM Nov 16 2009 
let all the people that dont have insurance but can afford it pay there bills without the help of any goverment plans.let them go pay millons and dont give them any wayout
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(2 RATINGS)
 
BH4108
12:55PM Nov 16 2009 
notice how few polls AOL has had on news articals lately! I guess they don't want to show everyone the over whelming number of Americans who disagree with the direction the govrnment is taking us. Come on AOL quit trying to cover-up how bad this administration is doing!
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(8 RATINGS)
 
Donedaytona
12:18PM Nov 16 2009 
Goodbye Dems ! You have sealed your fate with this attempted take-over of our health-care system. Millions upon millions of Americans are finally paying attention to the destructive agenda of this administration. The Revolution against this administration has officially begun ! Politically speaking , of course !!!
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(12 RATINGS)
 
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