Lodi News-Sentinel

Poll: Majority of Americans dissatisfi­ed with health care quality

- Brendan Rascius

For the first time in decades, a majority of Americans view health care quality as subpar, potentiall­y a reflection of growing dissatisfa­ction with high costs and recent policy changes, new polling reveals.

Forty-eight percent of those surveyed said health care quality was “excellent” or “good,” while a slight majority, 52%, said it was “only fair” or “poor,” according to Gallup’s annual Health and Healthcare survey, which has been administer­ed since 2001.

The poll of 1,020 adults was conducted Nov. 9-Dec. 2 with a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The latest results fall well below the 62% satisfacti­on rating recorded in 2010 and 2012, and trail the average satisfacti­on rating by seven points.

One factor contributi­ng to the downward trend is Republican­s’ souring opinion of the health care industry since Donald Trump left office, according to the poll. In 2019, 75% of GOP supporters rated health care quality as excellent or good, whereas in 2022, only 56% said the same.

Meanwhile, Democrats have held steady with their 44% satisfacti­on rating.

Young adults, too, have helped curtail positive ratings over the past year. It’s possible that policy decisions enacted during the COVID19 pandemic or decreased access to abortion in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision factored into their dampened opinions, researcher­s said.

In addition to record-low ratings of health care quality in general, Americans’ assessment of their own personal health care is also at a low point. Seventy-two percent rated it as excellent or good, a decrease from the past several years.

This year’s decline is exclusivel­y a product of young adult dissatisfa­ction, researcher­s said. Hardly half of those aged 18 to 34 are “upbeat about the quality of care they receive, versus 72% of those 35 to 54 and 85% of those 55 and older.”

However, a mismatch was revealed when researcher­s asked respondent­s to rate the country’s coverage versus their own. Only onethird said they were satisfied with national coverage, but two-thirds were satisfied with their own.

Additional­ly, a paltry 24% of respondent­s were satisfied with the cost of health care, while 76% were dissatisfi­ed.

A similar poll, conducted in 2016 by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, found that while Americans were generally content with their health care, they encountere­d “significan­t problems with health care costs.”

Americans have long spent more for their health care than any other developed country, according to Johns Hopkins University research. Elevated drug prices, higher salaries and hospital administra­tion costs are the main factors driving the above-average costs.

In a 2020 global survey of health care quality, Australia, the Netherland­s and Great Britain received the highest ratings — all of them being over 74%, according to Ipsos. The United States placed sixth with 71% approval.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? A majority of Americans view health care quality in the U.S. as subpar, potentiall­y a reflection of growing dissatisfa­ction with high costs and recent policy changes.
DREAMSTIME A majority of Americans view health care quality in the U.S. as subpar, potentiall­y a reflection of growing dissatisfa­ction with high costs and recent policy changes.

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