Story Highlights
- 61% say healthcare system is in crisis or has major problems
- Lowest percentage critical of the healthcare system since 2001
- Majority of Americans prefer system based on private insurance
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Six in 10 Americans believe the U.S. healthcare system is in a state of crisis (16%) or has major problems (45%), the lowest in ºÚÁÏÍø's trend since 1994, except for a 2001 reading. The figure was closer to seven in 10 from 2003 to 2018, but had dropped below that last year, even before the coronavirus pandemic plagued the nation.
Line graph. Sixty-one percent of Americans say the U.S. health care system is in a state of crisis or has major problems, the lowest measured since 2001. In most years, the percentage has been closer to 70%, apart from 49% in 2001 and 63% in 2019 and 61% this year.
The unusual finding of 49% rating the healthcare system a crisis or major problem in 2001 was recorded two months after 9/11. At that time, Americans' perceptions of many issues being a problem were suppressed, and they were rallying around their leaders and U.S. institutions. However, the percentage expressing significant concern about healthcare crept back up to 70% by 2005 and subsequently remained near that level until it dropped in 2019.
Most of the change in attitudes about the healthcare system since 2018 has come from a reduction in the percentage saying the system has major problems, which has been at or above 50% in all but 2001, 2019 and 2020. The 16% who believe the system is in a state of crisis matches the trend's average going back to 1994.
In addition to the 61% of Americans today who are critical of the state of the healthcare system, 35% believe it has minor problems and 3% say it does not have any problems.
These results are based on ºÚÁÏÍø's annual Health and Healthcare survey, conducted Nov. 5-19. The survey also found Americans' satisfaction with healthcare costs at a new high and approval of the Affordable Care Act tied for the highest it has been.
Republicans Primarily Responsible for Diminished Healthcare Concern
In many years, Republicans, Democrats and independents have had similar views of the U.S. healthcare system. In others, including this year, there have been wide partisan gaps. Typically, supporters of the incumbent president's party tend to be much less critical of the healthcare system than supporters of the opposition party.
Consistent with that pattern, 43% of Republicans, compared with 78% of Democrats, believe the U.S. healthcare system is in a state of crisis or has major problems. The 35-percentage-point gap in Republicans' and Democrats' ratings represents one of the largest in the trend, along with the 37-point gap last year.
The recent decline in concern about the healthcare system is primarily being driven by Republicans. Since 2018, there has been a 17-point drop among Republicans in negative assessments of it, compared with single-digit decreases among Democrats and independents.
Line graph. Views of the healthcare system have often varied by political party. The last three years have seen gaps of 24 or more percentage points in the views of Republicans and Democrats in terms of whether the healthcare systems is in a crisis or has major problems, with Democrats much more likely to hold that view.
Just three years ago, during the first year of Donald Trump's presidency, between 70% and 73% of all party groups were critical of the current state of the healthcare system. Prior to that, from 2014 to 2016, the final three years of Barack Obama's presidency, Republicans were more likely than Democrats to view the healthcare system as being in a crisis or having major problems -- and at about the same rate as Democrats are today.
Similar to the pattern seen today, Democrats were more critical than Republicans in the latter part of George W. Bush's presidency, between 2004 and 2008, and continuing into the first three years of the Obama administration. However, at that time, solid majorities of Republicans also perceived problems with the system, contrasted with the 43% and 46% recorded the past two years.
Public Wants Government to Ensure Healthcare Within a Private System
As Americans' views of the healthcare system have improved in recent years, their preferences for how the government should approach healthcare have been stable.
Fifty-six percent say it is the federal government's responsibility to make sure all Americans have healthcare, while 42% disagree. For most of ºÚÁÏÍø's trend, which dates back to 2000, a majority have said the government should ensure healthcare for all. The exceptions occurred from 2009 to 2014, a period when the government debated and implemented the Affordable Care Act. During those years, between 42% and 50% thought the government was responsible for making sure Americans had healthcare.
Line graph. For most of the past 20 years, majorities of Americans have said it is the federal government's responsibility to ensure all Americans have health insurance, including a high of 69% in 2006. The low point was 42% in 2013.
Even as Americans say the government has a responsibility to ensure healthcare, they do not want the government to run the healthcare system. Fifty-five percent want to maintain a system -- like the current one -- mostly based on private insurance, whereas 42% would prefer a government-run system.
There has been a modest increase in the percentage favoring a government-run system compared with 2010 through 2014, when an average of 36% held this view.
Line graph. A majority of Americans have been in favor of a healthcare systems based on private insurance in all but one survey since 2010. The exception was 48% in 2017. The high point was 61% in 2010, 2013 and 2014.
Healthcare system preferences are strongly influenced by political party, with Democrats generally saying the government should ensure all Americans have healthcare and favoring a government-run system, and Republicans holding the opposite views.
Democrats are much more likely to say the government should ensure healthcare (87%) than they are to favor a government-run system (62%). The same pattern is evident among independents (59% say it is the government's responsibility; 49% favor a government system) and among Republicans (22% and 12%, respectively), but those groups show smaller gaps in their attitudes than Democrats do.
Bottom Line
Americans are less likely than two years ago to say the healthcare system is in trouble, but a majority still hold that view. The softening in attitudes mostly stems from Republicans being pleased with the Trump administration and its approach to healthcare. Attitudes have become more closely linked to the party of the president in the past two years, given the larger gap in Democratic vs. Republican ratings than in prior years.
The year Trump was elected, eight in 10 Republicans said the U.S. healthcare system was in a crisis or had major problems. This came after numerous Republican attempts to repeal or otherwise weaken the Affordable Care Act passed during the Obama administration. Though the Trump administration was unable to repeal the law, it has weakened it, most notably by eliminating the requirement that all Americans carry health insurance or pay a fine.
Under the incoming Biden administration, federal government healthcare policy will look very different from the past four years, but maybe similar to what it was the prior eight years under Obama. Biden, as vice president to Obama, was heavily involved in the passage of the Affordable Care Act and has promised to strengthen the law. How much he is able to do will depend to a large degree on which party has control of the Senate, to be decided in Georgia's upcoming runoff elections. But even if Democrats win control, the narrow margins they would hold in the House of Representatives and Senate may limit the Biden administration's ability to enact some of his plans.
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