Sort by:
RelevanceDate
Search Results
Showing 91-100 of 155 results.
The SCOTUS Ruling Thursday and Public Opinion
Key implications of Thursday's Supreme Court healthcare ruling from a public opinion perspective.
Americans' Desire to Modify Healthcare Law Down From 2011
Half of Americans want to see the Affordable Care Act repealed or scaled back, down from 57% in January 2011. Thirty-eight percent want the law kept as is or expanded, essentially unchanged.
Politics Affect Uninsured Americans' Insurance Intentions
Uninsured Americans' intentions to sign up for health insurance are highly related to their politics, with Democrats twice as likely as Republicans to say they will get insurance.
U.S. Uninsured Rate Continues to Fall
The U.S. uninsured rate continues to decline in 2014, registering 15.9% so far in 2014 compared with 17.1% in the fourth quarter of 2013. The uninsured rate has dropped most among lower-income and black Americans.
Exchange Purchasers Rate Health Coverage Less Positively
U.S. adults who purchased health insurance through a federal or state healthcare exchange rate their coverage less positively than those who purchased elsewhere.
The Central Issue of the Campaign
Americans' responses to our recent set of questions about the impact of the Affordable Care Act help us understand the major overarching difference point in this presidential campaign: the appropriate role of government.
More Americans Delaying Medical Treatment Due to Cost
Putting off treatment for a medical condition because of the cost is at a high ebb in the U.S.
Uninsured Rate Rises in 17 States in 2017
The uninsured rate rose by statistically significant margins in 17 states in 2017, while no states saw their uninsured rate drop compared with 2016.
Majority of Americans Want Major Changes to Health Law
In the U.S., a majority of Americans want Congress to either repeal or scale back the 2010 healthcare law. Republicans and Democrats are more divided about what Congress should do than they were in October.
Majority in U.S. Say Healthcare Not Gov't Responsibility
The percentage of Americans saying it is not the federal government's responsibility to ensure all Americans have healthcare coverage remains at record levels. Much of this stems from Republicans' and independents' changing attitudes.