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Poll: Public Mixed on Whether Medicaid Work Requirements Are More to
Cut Spending or to Lift People Up; Most Do Not Support Lifetime Limits on
Benefits
54%
of Public Now View the Affordable Care Act Favorably - a New High in Eight
Years of KFF Polls
Ahead of the Midterms, Voters
across Parties See Costs as their Top Health Care Concern
At a time when the Trump Administration is
encouraging state efforts to revamp their Medicaid programs through waivers, the latest Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll finds
the public split on whether the reason behind proposals to impose work
requirements on some low-income Medicaid beneficiaries is to lift people out
of poverty or to reduce spending.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in
January provided new guidance to states and has since approved such waivers
in two states (Kentucky and Indiana). Eight other states have pending
requests
When asked the goal of work requirements, four in
10 (41%) say it is to reduce government spending by limiting the people
enrolled in the program, while a third (33%) say it is to lift people out of
poverty as proponents say.
While larger shares of Democrats and independents
say the reason is to cut costs, Republicans are more divided, with roughly
equal shares saying it is to lift people out of poverty (42%) as to reduce
government spending (40%). People living in the 10 states that have approved
or pending work requirement waivers are similarly divided, with near-equal
shares saying the goal is to lift people out of poverty (37%) as to reduce
government spending (36%). This holds true even when controlling for other
demographic variables including party identification and income.
In addition to work requirements, five states are
currently seeking Medicaid waivers to impose lifetime limits on the benefits
that non-disabled adults could receive under the Medicaid program. The poll
finds the public skeptical of such a shift, with two thirds (66%) saying
Medicaid should be available to low-income people as long as they qualify,
twice the share (33%) as say it should only provide temporary help for a
limited time.
Substantial majorities of Democrats (84%) and
independents (64%) say Medicaid should be available without lifetime limits,
while Republicans are divided with similar shares favoring time limits (51%)
and opposing them (47%).
These views may reflect people’s personal
experiences with Medicaid and the generally positive views the public has
toward the current program, which provides health coverage and long-term care
to tens of millions of low-income adults and children nationally.
Seven in 10 Americans report a personal connection
to Medicaid at some point in their lives – either directly through their own
health insurance coverage (32%) or their child being covered (9%), or
indirectly through a friend or other family member (29%).
Three in four (74%) hold favorable views of
Medicaid, including significant majorities of Democrats (83%), independents
(74%) and Republicans (65%). About half (52%) of the public say the current
Medicaid program is working well for low-income enrollees, while about a
third (32%) say it is not working well.
Most
Residents of Non-Expansion States Favor Medicaid Expansion to Cover More
Low-Income People
Under the Affordable Care Act, most states
expanded their Medicaid programs to cover more low-income adults. In the 18
states that have not done so, a majority (56%) say that their state should
expand Medicaid to cover more low-income adults, while nearly four in 10
(37%) say their state should keep Medicaid as it is today.
Slightly more than half of Republicans living in
the 18 non-expansion states (all of which have either Republican governors,
Republican-controlled legislatures or both) say their state should keep
Medicaid as it is today (54%) while four in 10 (39%) say their state should
expand their Medicaid program.
Favorable
Views of the ACA Reach New High in More Than 80 KFF Polls
The poll finds 54 percent of the public now holds
a favorable view of the Affordable Care Act, the highest share recorded in
more than 80 KFF polls since the law’s enactment in 2010. This reflects a
slight increase in favorable views since January (50%), while unfavorable views
held steady at 42 percent.
The shift toward more positive views comes
primarily from independents (55% view the ACA favorably this month, up
slightly from 48% in January).
Public
Remains Confused about Repeal of the ACA’s Individual Mandate
The poll also probes the public’s awareness about
the repeal of the ACA’s requirement that nearly all Americans have health
insurance or pay a fine, commonly known as the individual mandate. The tax
legislation enacted in December 2017 eliminated this requirement beginning in
2019.
About four in 10 people (41%) are aware that
Congress repealed the individual mandate, a slight increase from January,
when 36 percent were aware of the provision’s repeal.
However, misunderstandings persist. Most (61%) of
the public is either unaware that the requirement has been repealed (40%) or
is aware of its repeal but mistakenly believes the requirement will not be in
effect during 2018 (21%). Few (13%) are both aware that it has been repealed
and that it remains in effect for this year.
Costs
are Voters' Top Health Care Concern ahead of the 2018 Midterm Elections
Looking ahead to this year’s midterm elections,
the poll finds Democratic, Republican and independent voters most often cite
costs as the health care issue that they most want candidates to address.
When asked to say in their own words what health
care issue that they most want candidates to discuss, more than twice as many
voters mention health care costs (22%) as any other issue, including
repealing or opposing the Affordable Care Act (7%). Costs are the clear
top issue for Democrats (16%) and independents (25%), and one of the top
issues for Republicans (22%) followed by repealing or opposing the ACA (17%).
Designed and analyzed by public opinion
researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation, the poll was conducted from
February 15-20, 2018 among a nationally representative random digit dial
telephone sample of 1,193 adults. Interviews were conducted in English and
Spanish by landline (422) and cell phone (771). The margin of sampling error
is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample. For results based
on subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the
Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit organization based in Menlo Park,
California.
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To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Public Mixed on Whether Medicaid Work Requirements Are More to Cut Spending or to Lift People Up
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