Monday, May 25, 2009

U.S. Physicians’ Views on Financing Options to Expand Health Insurance Coverage: A National Survey

U.S. Physicians’ Views on Financing Options to Expand Health Insurance Coverage: A National Survey:

MAIN RESULTS

1,675 of 3,300 physicians responded (50.8%). Only 9% of physicians preferred the current employer-based financing system. Forty-nine percent favored either tax incentives or penalties to encourage the purchase of medical insurance, and 42% preferred a government-run, taxpayer-financed single-payer national health insurance program. The majority of respondents believed that all Americans should receive needed medical care regardless of ability to pay (89%); 33% believed that the uninsured currently have access to needed care. Nearly one fifth of respondents (19.3%) believed that even the insured lack access to needed care. Views about access were independently associated with support for single-payer national health insurance.

CONCLUSIONS
The vast majority of physicians surveyed supported a change in the health care financing system. While a plurality support the use of financial incentives, a substantial proportion support single payer national health insurance. These findings challenge the perception that fundamental restructuring of the U.S. health care financing system receives little acceptance by physicians.


This is the article referenced in the post below this one on physicians and physicians' organizations views on health care reform. The full article is here and in PDF.

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