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Obamacare repeal on voters' minds, but so are healthcare costs, Kaiser poll finds

Kaiser found 30 percent support expanding the law, 14 percent like it as is and 11 percent support scaling it back.

Susan Morse, Executive Editor

Donald Trump has pitched his own alternative to the Affordable Care Act. (Flickr photo)

Healthcare is top of mind for U.S. voters, with worries ranging from the fate of the Affordable Care Act to the out-of-pocket burden patients face in seeking medical care, according to a Kaiser Health Tracking Poll that examined the role of healthcare issues in the presidential election.

While 37 percent of respondents listed the ACA as the top healthcare issue, 36 percent pointed to healthcare costs, 26 percent said increasing access for the uninsured and 10 percent chose Medicare as the healthcare issue most important to them.

The Affordable Care Act is still incredibly divisive among Republican and Democratic voters, but only 30 percent overall say they want to see it repealed. Kaiser found 30 percent support expanding the law, 14 percent like it as is and 11 percent support scaling it back.

Of course, the breakdown changes when looking at each party's voters separately.

[Also: Toxic politics divide Obamacare support, though public backing for law is rising, Health Affairs says]

In its poll, Kaiser found more than half of Democratic voters want Congress to expand the Affordable Care Act, a significant increase from the 36 percent of Democratic voters who wanted to expand the law when polled in December 2015.

"This increase may be due to the rhetoric surrounding universal health care in the Democratic presidential campaign, with both candidates advocating universal coverage as a goal," Kaiser said.

The biggest healthcare issue for 39 percent of Democrats polled was expanding coverage for the uninsured, followed by the 37 percent who cited healthcare costs and the 30 percent who said they wanted candidates to talk about the ACA.

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But while Democrats wanted discussions about access, Republicans tended to want presidential candidates to discuss the healthcare law and its repeal.

The future of President Barack Obama's signature legislation has been a hot topic among candidates running for president. The remaining Republican candidates, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz and John Kasich, have each pitched ideas on replacing the law. Meanwhile, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton has said she would expand the law while her opponent Bernie Sanders is instead favor of a single-payer, Medicare-for-all solution.

Twitter: @SusanJMorse