Health Affairs February 19, 2020
Mollyann Brodie, Elizabeth C. Hamel, Ashley Kirzinger, and Drew E. Altman

ABSTRACT

When the Affordable Care Act (ACA) became law in 2010, public opinion of it was narrowly divided and deeply partisan. Our review of 102 nationally representative public opinion polls in the period 2010–19 reveals that opinion remains divided and has shifted in a sustained way at only two points in time: in a negative direction following technical problems in the first enrollment period, and in a positive direction after President Donald Trump’s election and subsequent Republican repeal efforts. In late 2019 the ACA was more popular than ever, yet partisan divisions have gotten larger rather than smaller. Many core elements of the law remain popular across partisan groups, even as fewer people recognize the ACA as the...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: ACA (Affordable Care Act), CMS, Congress / White House, Govt Agencies, HHS, Insurance, Patient / Consumer, Payer, Provider, Public Exchange
Payer executives expect limited change in ACA subsidies
Commercial, individual markets growing increasingly concentrated: 7 numbers to know
GAO finds private insurance market became increasingly concentrated last decade
Section 1557 Rule Mandates Identification And Mitigation Of Discriminatory Clinical Algorithms
Employer Plans Beware: Alternative Funding Programs May Be Riskier Than They Appear

Share This Article