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Hawaii Reclaims Top Spot in U.S. Well-Being
For the fifth time in eight years, Hawaii claimed the top spot among U.S. states for well-being, while 2014's highest well-being state, Alaska, slipped to second. West Virginia had the lowest well-being for the seventh consecutive year.
Americans' Satisfaction With Healthcare System Edges Down
In the U.S., 65% are satisfied with the way the healthcare system works for them, down slightly from 67% in 2014. Those with government health plans are most satisfied, and Democrats are more satisfied than Republicans.
Majority Say Not Gov't Duty to Provide Healthcare for All
For the third consecutive year, a majority of Americans, 52%, say it is not the government's responsibility to make sure all Americans have healthcare. Prior to 2009, a majority of Americans took the opposite view.
As New Enrollment Period Starts, ACA Approval at 37%
Days away from the beginning of the second enrollment period of the Affordable Care Act, 37% of Americans said they approve of the law, one percentage point below the previous low of 38% in January.
Newly Insured Through Exchanges Give Coverage Good Marks
Americans who bought new health insurance policies through the government exchanges this year are generally pleased with their coverage, and are more satisfied with their coverage costs than others with insurance are. Most plan to renew their ...
Amid Exchange Site Glitches, Views of Health Law Steady
Americans' familiarity with the healthcare law and their assessments of its future impact are little changed since August. Their views of the law's impact remain more negative than positive.
Americans on the Individual Mandate, and More
Americans overwhelmingly believe the so-called "individual mandate" included in the U.S. healthcare reform law is unconstitutional. They said so by a margin of 72% to 20% in a Gallup poll conducted Feb. 20-21, 2012. Americans on average are not ...
The Interesting Month of March
March is over, and the month had several interesting and significant events from the perspective of American public opinion.
Politics Are Biggest Factor in Views of Healthcare Law
With Monday's deadline for enrolling in an insurance plan past, political party ID remains the most influential predictor of whether an individual disapproves of the healthcare law.
Tracking Healthcare's "Winners" & "Losers"
Gallup finds that 49% of Americans say it's a good thing that healthcare reform is now law. Independents are evenly split and 11% of all Americans still give no opinion.