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Obamacare popularity grows as independent voters shift to favorable position on landmark legislation

Pew, Kaiser polls asked people if they approved or disapproved of the healthcare law; Medicaid found to be major driver.

Jane Sarasohn-Kahn, healthcare economist

Results of two polls published in the past week, from the Kaiser Family Foundation and Pew Research Center, demonstrate growing support for the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.

The Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: Future Directions for the ACA and Medicaid was published February 23, 2017. The margins in February 2017 were 48 percent favorable, 42 percent  unfavorable.

While the majority of Republicans continue to be solidly against the ACA, a larger share of voters who identify as Independent have shifted to a favorable position on Obamacare.

Furthermore, the KFF survey found that more than one-half of Americans overall say Medicaid is important for their families, with fewer Republicans saying so. Fifty-six  percent of Americans said they had some connection to Medicaid, either currently or in the past.

[Also: Hundreds of rural hospitals already at risk of closing as ACA repeal looms, increasing their vulnerability]

The KFF survey was conducted February 13-19, 2017 by telephone among 1,160 U.S. adults ages 18 and older.

The Pew poll asked people if they approved or disapproved of the healthcare law passed by Barack Obama and Congress in 2010. The difference between pro- and con- in the Pew poll was wider than in the KFF survey, with 54 percent approving and 43 percent disapproving.

Among people who disapprove of the law, more want to see Republican Congressional leaders modify the law versus repealing it, now with 44 percent of Republicans seeking repeal and 42 percent looking for a "repair."

There's also a big difference in how younger Americans view the ACA compared with older people by a 2:1 ratio: 65 percent of younger adults approve of the law vs. 31 percent who disapprove. Support for Obamacare has also grown among Americans between 50 and 64 years of age.

[Also: President Trump meets with big insurer CEOs following leak of Obamacare repeal/replace plan]

Note that the divergence in positive/negative responses in both polls reversed in 2017, lines crossing in the opposite directions as the 2017 new year set in with the eventual confirmation of Secretary Tom Price to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, and the reality of prospects for an ACA repeal.

Finally, college graduates are more likely to support the Affordable Care Act than people with no college.

The Pew poll was conducted among 1,503 U.S. adults the week before the KFF study, February 7-12, 2017.

Health Populi's Hot Points:  Media outlets repeated the Democratic Party leadership's mantra that "Republicans could make America sick again." The UK's Financial Times reported that, "Trump warns party on speed of health reform as lawmakers push alternative visions." The column pointed out: "The day after Republicans took a first step towards repealing the Obama reforms, the president and Mr. Pence separately met lawmakers who are pushing alternative visions for improving healthcare while trying to insulate themselves from future public ire."

[Also: Community clinics worry Obamacare repeal will leave them high and dry]

The issue "spans household budgets, government spending and the profitability of the health industry," the FT called out.

Indeed: the U.S. healthcare economy is $1 in $5 of the national economy: As such, the healthcare economy is the national economy.

At last week's annual HIMSS conference, which attracted more than 40,000 healthcare information technology users and developers to Orlando, there was a growing number of vendors focused on patient payment systems – to deliver greater transparency, medical banking, and so-called "revenue cycle management."

Healthcare providers, hospitals and physicians alike, are confronted by patients who are now payers: paying first-dollar coverage out-of-pocket whether in high deductible health plans, working through health savings accounts, or paying @retail without insurance or under-insured. These patients are Democrats, Independents, and Republicans alike, all seeing $1 in every $5 bill in their pocketbook going to healthcare costs.

Over one-half of respondents to the February 2017 KFF poll reported some connection Medicaid: a fact that Congress, President Trump, and Secretary Price should note.

I'll put a real-life, fine point on this: I spent last Friday morning, February 24, with the Kansas Hospital Association brainstorming the growing role of patients as consumers in U.S. healthcare. Kansas Governor Brownback had not expanded Medicaid to-date, and neither had the State House been keen to do so. The night before my speech to the Association, the State House had voted in favor of expanding Medicaid. That issue will now be considered by the Kansas State Senate.

This is a state that has been very conservative about Medicaid expansion. Now, in February 2017, we see a sign that state representatives seek a change. Kansas could be a bellwether. Watch this space: "ad astra per aspera" means, "through hardship to the stars." There are few greater hardships than a very sick person facing a choice between paying for healthcare services and life-saving drugs, and paying for food, shelter, and heat in the winter.

This article first appeared in Healthcare IT News.

Twitter: @HC_Finance