'Seniors and patients are clear. They do not support so-called government 'negotiation' when they learn it will sacrifice access and future innovation. Every country that has price controls has experienced these trade-offs, and non-partisan experts warn the same thing could happen in America,' said
Almost all Americans (87%) say that politicians have lost touch with what the public needs from their health care.
Only 2% of people taking prescription medicines feel that drug prices are the most important health care issue to them; instead, like most Americans, patients highlight health insurance coverage and costs (9%) and COVID (14%) as the top health care concerns.
Support for Government 'Negotiation' Plummets When Voters Learn About Trade-offs
Seniors overwhelmingly reject government 'negotiation' when the learn it threatens access and future innovation. While three out of four seniors initially support the federal government negotiating drug prices, support among seniors falls to just 10% when told the policy could delay people's access to new medicines.
Support from patients taking medicines drops to 17% when told government 'negotiation' could lead to less research and development (R&D) for new medicines and treatments.
80% of Americans agree it's important to ensure ongoing R&D is protected and properly incentivized to continue the development of medicines to treat cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurological conditions and other illnesses.
72% of Americans also agree that R&D of new treatments must be protected and incentivized so patients who lack existing treatment options may be offered access to future treatments they need to lead longer and healthier lives.
70% of all Americans prefer a health insurance plan where they pay a slightly higher premium each month if it leads to better coverage and less out-of-pocket costs when they go to the doctor or fill a prescription, compared to just 30% who prefer a slightly lower premium with a higher deductible or copay.
Three out of four patients taking medicines (76%) are more likely to prefer a health insurance plan where they pay a slightly higher premium each month if it provides better coverage and pay less out of pocket.
Americans believe the most personally-impactful changes needed are placing a cap on the amount health insurers can make patients pay for their deductibles, copays and other out-of-pocket costs (33%) and giving insurers more incentives to keep the costs of health plans manageable for people who are sick and taking medicines (17%).
The poll was conducted among 2,510 American adults using
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