Medicare Blog

how well does medicare for all poll in michigan

by Dr. Danial Gibson Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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How many people in Michigan are on Medicare?

2,104,129 peopleMedicare enrollment in Michigan As of September 2020, there were 2,104,129 people enrolled in Medicare in Michigan. That's nearly 21 percent of the state's population, versus about 19 percent of the total US population enrolled in Medicare.

Is Medicare for All the same as Obamacare?

Private insurance, employer-provided insurance, Medicaid and our current version of Medicare, would all be replaced by Medicare for All. The Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as Obamacare, would also be replaced by Medicare for All. Medicare for All is actually more generous than your current Medicare program.

What are the pros and cons of Medicare for All?

In theory, universal healthcare leads to a healthier society and workforce. But, the biggest downside is that healthy people pay for the medical care of less healthy people....Pros of Medicare for All:Coverage for all.Doctors get equal pay.Spending leverage for lower rates.Medicare and Medicaid are single-payer systems.

How successful has Medicare been?

Medicare's successes over the past 35 years include doubling the number of persons age 65 or over with health insurance, increasing access to mainstream health care services, and substantially reducing the financial burdens faced by older Americans.

How Medicare for All would hurt the economy?

The real trouble comes when Medicare for all is financed by deficits. With government borrowing, universal health care could shrink the economy by as much as 24% by 2060, as investments in private capital are reduced.

Is Medicare more expensive than Obamacare?

The average Medicare Part D plan premium in 2021 is $47.59 per month. The average Medicare Supplement Insurance plan premium in 2019 was $125.93 per month. The average Obamacare benchmark premium in 2021 is $452 per month.

What would happen if we get rid of Medicare?

Payroll taxes would fall 10 percent, wages would go up 11 percent and output per capita would jump 14.5 percent. Capital per capita would soar nearly 38 percent as consumers accumulated more assets, an almost ninefold increase compared to eliminating Medicare alone.

What are two major problems with respect to the future of Medicare?

Financing care for future generations is perhaps the greatest challenge facing Medicare, due to sustained increases in health care costs, the aging of the U.S. population, and the declining ratio of workers to beneficiaries.

Does AARP support Medicare for All?

AARP has more than 35 million members and also has a for-profit subsidiary that markets Medicare supplemental insurance, life insurance, investment funds and other financial products. Proposal Summary: AARP supports universal health care coverage by strengthening and expanding existing public programs.

Is Medicare a failure?

The Congressional Budget Office now projects that the Medicare program will be effectively bankrupt in 2021, and its continuing growth will increasingly burden the federal budget, sinking the nation deeper into debt.

What percentage of the US population is on Medicare and Medicaid?

Of the subtypes of health insurance coverage, employment-based insurance was the most common, covering 54.4 percent of the population for some or all of the calendar year, followed by Medicare (18.4 percent), Medicaid (17.8 percent), direct-purchase coverage (10.5 percent), TRICARE (2.8 percent), and Department of ...

What was healthcare like before Medicare?

Prior to Medicare, only a little over one-half of those aged 65 and over had some type of hospital insurance; few among the insured group had insurance covering any part of their surgical and out-of-hospital physicians' costs.

Why is Medicare for All misleading?

It is misleading because Medicare for All does not in any way “remove the current health care system” and such wording creates a negative impression with respondents. Instead of asking a series of questions to clarify preferences, a recent Hill-HarrisX survey prompted respondents to choose among five potentially confusing choices.

How can journalists better represent polls?

Journalists can better represent polls by not reporting on poorly worded or biased polls, noting the increased political polarization in results and providing context about how results from an individual poll compare to results from other polls. As health care consistently tops the list of key issues for voters – particularly for Democrats ...

What are the different labels for health care reform?

Even within the same poll, terms like “Medicare for All” and “universal health coverage” generally poll higher than terms like “a national health plan” or “single-payer health insurance” (with even further variation among Democrats, Independents and Republicans).

Why is polling important?

While polling is crucial for helping us understand the opinions, concerns and preferences of the American public, it is essential that results are accurally interpreted and fairly presented. To not do so plays directly into the hand of corporate profiteers who gain mightily by preserving the status quo of our broken health care system.

Do Democrats support Medicare for All?

Despite huge amounts of corporate spending on ads attacking Medicare for All, robust support among Democrats has remain ed consistent and even increased in recent months while Independents’ support has remained constant. A January 2020 Kaiser Family Foundation poll found that 77% of Democrats “Favor having a national health plan, sometimes called Medicare for All, in which all Americans would get their insurance from a single government plan.” A December 2019 NBC/WSJ poll found that 68% of Democrats supported “Adopting Medicare for All, a single-payer health care system in which private health insurance would be eliminated and all Americans would get their health coverage from one government plan,” —which was up from 63% in September 2019.

Do pollsters use neutral language?

Pollsters should use consistent, accurate and neutral language when asking about Medicare for All. For example, wording such as “ Do you (support or oppose) a ’Medicare for All’ health care system, where all Americans would be covered by a national health plan? ” conveys the scope of Medicare for All without overly biasing respondents.

Is Medicare polling reliable?

However, the validity and reliability of the polling on Medicare for All and other health care reform efforts vary widely as does the accuracy of reporting on such polls. It is important for both the public and journalists to look closely at the substance of the polls, as focusing only on topline results can introduce significant bias ...

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