학술논문

Health Insurance Loss during COVID-19 May Increase Support for Universal Health Coverage.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Health Politics, Policy & Law. Feb2022, Vol. 47 Issue 1, p1-25. 25p. 7 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*HEALTH policy
*COMPUTER software
*STATISTICS
*SOCIAL support
*UNEMPLOYMENT
*COVID-19
*PRACTICAL politics
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*REGRESSION analysis
*SURVEYS
*NATIONAL health insurance
*HEALTH insurance
*CASE studies
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*STATISTICAL sampling
*DATA analysis software
*PUBLIC opinion
*COVID-19 pandemic
*MEDICARE
*INSURANCE
PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act
Language
ISSN
0361-6878
Abstract
Context: The United States is the only high-income country that relies on employer-sponsored health coverage to insure a majority of its population. Millions of Americans lost employer-sponsored health insurance during the COVID- 19-induced economic downturn. We examine public opinion toward universal health coverage policies in this context. Methods: Through a survey of 1,211 Americans in June 2020. we examine the influence of health insurance loss on support for Medicare for All (M4A) and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in two ways. First. we examine associations between pandemic-related health insurance loss and M4A support. Second. we experimentally prime some respondents with a vignette of a sympathetic person who lost employer-sponsored coverage during COVID-19. Findings: We find that directly experiencing recent health insurance loss is strongly associated (10 pp, p <0.01) with greater M4A support and with more favorable views of extending the ACA (19.3 pp. p< 0.01). Experimental exposure to the vignette increasesM4A supportby 6 pp (p =0.05). Conclusions: In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. situational framings can induce modest change in support for M4A. However. real-world health insurance losses are associated with larger differences in support for M4A and with greater support for existing safety net policies such as the ACA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]