AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives..

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AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives.. November 2009

AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives Copyright 2009 AARP Knowledge Management 601 E Street, NW Washington, DC 20049 http://www.aarp.org/research Reprinting with permission

AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan membership organization that helps people 50+ have independence, choice and control in ways that are beneficial and affordable to them and society as a whole. AARP does not endorse candidates for public office or make contributions to either political campaigns or candidates. We produce AARP The Magazine, the definitive voice for 50+ Americans and the world's largest-circulation magazine with over 35.5 million readers; AARP Bulletin, the go-to news source for AARP's 40 million members and Americans 50+; AARP Segunda Juventud, the only bilingual U.S. publication dedicated exclusively to the 50+ Hispanic community; and our website, AARP.org. AARP Foundation is an affiliated charity that provides security, protection, and empowerment to older persons in need with support from thousands of volunteers, donors, and sponsors. We have staffed offices in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Acknowledgements Woelfel Research, Inc. of Dunn Loring, VA conducted this study. All media inquiries about this report should be directed to AARP Media Relations at (202) 434-2560.

AARP surveyed its members from October 30 to November 8, 2009 about the current health care reform plan in the House of Representatives. This survey of 424 is representative of AARP members in the state of Minnesota and has a margin of error of +/- 4.8. Awareness A majority of AARP members have heard either some or a lot about the health care reform plan introduced by President Obama and now being debated in Congress. Figure 1 below shows 50 of members have heard a lot and 31 of members have heard some about the health care reform plan introduced by President Obama. Figure 1 How much have you heard about the health care reform plan introduced by President Obama and now being debated in Congress? A lot, 50 Some, 31 Nothing at all, 3 Not too much, 15 Note: Total may be less than 100 due to responses of don t know and refused Elements of House Plan A majority of AARP members find various elements of the health care reform plan passed in the House of Representatives on November 7, 2009 to be a convincing reason to support the plan. In fact, there is strong support across party and ideological lines for elements of the plan. Figure 2 shows the percent of AARP members who find each reason either somewhat or very convincing. Figure 2 Elements of health care reform plan in the House of Representatives Percent who find element a somewhat or very convincing reason to support the plan It would ensure that people can see the doctor of their choice. 84 It would ensure that you can keep your current health insurance 83 coverage if you are happy with it. AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 1

Elements of health care reform plan in the House of Representatives It requires insurance companies to cover routine checkups and preventive care, like screening for diabetes, prostate cancer, and osteoporosis, with no extra charges. It allows Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices with pharmaceutical companies. It assures doctors that Medicare will compensate them fairly for treating seniors, so doctors don t stop seeing Medicare patients. It would prevent insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions. It would stop insurance companies from charging you much higher premiums based on your age. Percent who find element a somewhat or very convincing reason to support the plan 83 80 78 77 76 It protects Medicare benefits for seniors. 75 It would require everyone to have some form of health insurance, with 75 subsidies for those who can t afford it. It aggressively cracks down on waste, fraud, and abuse in Medicare 74 It ensures seniors aren t paying thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket 73 costs for prescription drugs and closes the Medicare doughnut hole. It prevents insurance companies from putting a cap on the amount of 73 health care you can receive in a given year or over the course of your life. It would provide people a choice of affordable private insurance options and a public plan administered by the federal government if they don t have health insurance or can t afford it. It provides a voluntary program to help people plan ahead so they can afford long-term care services and supports. It would be paid for in part by a tax on married couples who earn at least $1 million a year or individuals who earn at least $500,000 per year. It would reduce the federal budget deficit by $104 billion over the next 10 years Trust in AARP As shown in Figure 3, over three-quarters of AARP members consider various reasons to trust AARP s position on health care reform either somewhat or very convincing. 69 68 62 58 AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 2

Figure 3 How convincing a reason is this to trust AARP's position on health care reform? Very Somewhat Not too Not at all 3 6 6 7 6 7 9 6 38 29 38 34 52 58 45 53 AARP monitors how new laws and programs are implemented, so they do not end up hurting seniors and people over 50 As a non-partisan organization, AARP is an independent voice fighting for the best interests of people over 50. With over 40 million members, AARP has the power to ensure that any health care reform bill protects Americans over 50. AARP has always fought to protect its members and wouldn't support any reform unless it was good for people over 50. Note: Total may be less than 100 due to responses of don t know and refused Support for Plan After hearing the details of the House plan, as well as the statement below from AARP endorsing it, a majority of members support President Obama and Congress plan to reform health care. In the health care debate, AARP has chosen a side yours. That s why we re endorsing the health care reform plan in the House of Representatives. Because it ensures you re not denied insurance because of pre-existing conditions or age. It ensures your health care doesn t take a back seat to insurance companies and no one not insurance companies or the government comes between you and the doctors and specialists you choose. Most important, AARP endorses reform because it protects seniors benefits and Medicare so it s there for seniors now and for future generations. AARP is fighting for you because your health is worth fighting for. As Figure 4 shows, 41 of members strongly support the plan and 26 somewhat support it, after hearing the elements of the plan and the statement above. In fact, the percent of members who strongly support the plan exceeds the total percent who oppose it. While a partisan divide is evident when respondents are asked about the current plan in Congress, AARP members support the legislation by a margin of roughly two to one. AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 3

Figure 4 Given what you've heard about the bill and AARP support, do you support or oppose President Obama and Congress' plan to reform health care? Somewhat support, 26 Strongly support, 41 Don't know, 5 Somewhat oppose, 9 Strongly oppose, 18 Note: Total may be less than 100 due to responses of refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 4

ANNOTATED QUESTIONNAIRE (N=424, sampling error = ±4.8) Q1. Are you a member of AARP? 100 Yes - No TERMINATE Q2. How much have you heard about the health care reform plan introduced by President Obama and now being debated in Congress? 50 A lot 31 Some 15 Not too much 3 Nothing at all 1 Don t know 1 Refused Q3. I m going to read you a list of things that the current health care reform plan in the House of Representatives does, and for each one, please tell me how convincing a reason it is to support the plan in Congress. How convincing a reason is this to support the health care reform plan in Congress? Is it? For all: Very convincing Somewhat convincing Not too convincing Not at all convincing Don t know Refused DO NOT READ DO NOT READ [RANDOMIZE ORDER] AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 5

a) It would ensure that people can see the doctor of their choice. 63 Very convincing 21 Somewhat convincing 6 Not too convincing 9 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know <0.5 Refused b) It would prevent insurance companies from denying coverage based on preexisting conditions. 57 Very convincing 19 Somewhat convincing 11 Not too convincing 10 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know - Refused c) It would ensure that you can keep your current health insurance coverage if you are happy with it. 60 Very convincing 23 Somewhat convincing 7 Not too convincing 9 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know <0.5 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 6

d) It would stop insurance companies from charging you much higher premiums based on your age. 54 Very convincing 23 Somewhat convincing 9 Not too convincing 13 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know - Refused e) It would provide people a choice of affordable private insurance options and a public plan administered by the federal government if they don't have health insurance or can't afford it. 41 Very convincing 28 Somewhat convincing 12 Not too convincing 16 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know <0.5 Refused f) It requires insurance companies to cover routine checkups and preventive care like screening for diabetes, prostate cancer and osteoporosis with no extra charges. 57 Very convincing 26 Somewhat convincing 6 Not too convincing 9 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know - Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 7

g) It protects Medicare benefits for seniors. 59 Very convincing 16 Somewhat convincing 10 Not too convincing 12 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know 3 Refused h) It aggressively cracks down on waste, fraud, and abuse in Medicare. 55 Very convincing 19 Somewhat convincing 10 Not too convincing 13 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know <0.5 Refused i) It ensures seniors aren t paying thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs and closes the Medicare doughnut hole. 48 Very convincing 26 Somewhat convincing 12 Not too convincing 11 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know - Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 8

j) It prevents insurance companies from putting a cap on the amount of health care you can receive in a given year or over the course of your life. 49 Very convincing 24 Somewhat convincing 12 Not too convincing 13 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know - Refused k) It assures doctors that Medicare will compensate them fairly for treating seniors, so doctors don t stop seeing Medicare patients. 52 Very convincing 26 Somewhat convincing 9 Not too convincing 10 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know 1 Refused l) It allows Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices with pharmaceutical companies. 56 Very convincing 24 Somewhat convincing 9 Not too convincing 10 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know <0.5 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 9

m) It provides a voluntary program to help people plan ahead so they can afford long-term care services and supports. 34 Very convincing 34 Somewhat convincing 17 Not too convincing 12 Not at all convincing 3 Don t know 1 Refused n) It would reduce the federal budget deficit by $104 billion over the next 10 years. 41 Very convincing 18 Somewhat convincing 16 Not too convincing 23 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know <0.5 Refused o) It would require everyone to have some form of health insurance, with subsidies for those who can t afford it. 42 Very convincing 33 Somewhat convincing 10 Not too convincing 13 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know <0.5 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 10

p) It would be paid for in part by a tax on married couples who earn at least a million dollars a year or individuals who earn at least five-hundred thousand dollars per year. 40 Very convincing 22 Somewhat convincing 16 Not too convincing 19 Not at all convincing 4 Don t know <0.5 Refused Q4. Now I d like to read you some reasons that people might give for trusting AARP about health care reform. For each one, please tell me if you believe it is a very convincing, somewhat convincing, not that convincing, or not at all convincing reason to trust AARP s position on health care reform. How convincing a reason is this to trust to AARP s position on health care reform? Is it: READ LIST Very convincing Somewhat convincing Not too convincing Not at all convincing Don t know Refused DO NOT READ DO NOT READ a) AARP monitors how new laws and programs are implemented, so they do not end up hurting seniors and people over 50. 52 Very convincing 38 Somewhat convincing 3 Not too convincing 6 Not at all convincing 2 Don t know <0.5 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 11

b) As a non-partisan organization, AARP is an independent voice fighting for the best interests of people over 50. 58 Very convincing 29 Somewhat convincing 7 Not too convincing 6 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know - Refused c) With over 40 million members, AARP has the power to ensure that any health care reform bill protects Americans over 50. 45 Very convincing 38 Somewhat convincing 9 Not too convincing 7 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know <0.5 Refused d) AARP has always fought to protect its members and wouldn t support any reform unless it was good for people over 50. 53 Very convincing 34 Somewhat convincing 6 Not too convincing 6 Not at all convincing 1 Don t know - Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 12

Q5. Now I m going to read you a statement you might hear from AARP about health care reform and get your opinion on it. In the health care debate, AARP has chosen a side yours. That s why we re endorsing the health care reform plan in the House of Representatives. Because it ensures you re not denied insurance because of pre-existing conditions or age. It ensures your health care doesn t take a back seat to insurance companies and no one not insurance companies or the government comes between you and the doctors and specialists you choose. Most important, AARP endorses reform because it protects seniors benefits and Medicare so it s there for seniors now and for future generations. AARP is fighting for you because your health is worth fighting for. Given what you ve heard about the bill and AARP support, do you support or oppose President Obama and Congress s plan to reform health care? [Then ask] Is that strongly or somewhat? DEMOGRAPHICS 41 Strongly support 26 Somewhat support 9 Somewhat oppose 18 Strongly oppose 5 Don t know 1 Refused D1. What is your age as of your last birthday? years 48 50 to 64 [NET] 12...50 to 54 17 55 to 59 19 60 to 64 51 65 or older [NET] 16 65 to 69 12 70 to 74 24 75+ 2 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 13

D2. [RECORD GENDER] 46 Male 54 Female D3. What best describes your current healthcare coverage? Are you not covered by health insurance, covered by health insurance through you or your spouse s current or former employer, covered by a private health insurance plan you purchased yourself, covered by Medicare, covered by Medicaid, or covered by some government program other than Medicare? [Programming Note: Make this a multiple response question] 49 Not covered 29 Plan through your/your spouse s employer 45 Plan you purchased yourself 4 Medicare 4 Medicaid 11 Some other government program <0.5 [VOL] Something else <0.5 [VOL] Don t know 2 [VOL] Refused *Note - Percentages total to more than 100 because multiple responses were allowed D4. Are you Hispanic, of Spanish descent, or Latino? <0.5 Yes 99 No 1 Refused D5. What best describes your race? 96 White/Caucasian <0.5 Black /African American - Asian American 1 Native American 2 Other: 1 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 14

D6. Households are sometimes grouped according to income. Please indicate which group best estimates your annual household income before taxes in 2008. 3 Less than $10,000 8 $10,000 to $19,999 13 $20,000 to $29,999 13 $30,000 to $39,999 11 $40,000 to $49,999 20 $50,000 to $74,999 20 $75,000 or more 2 Don t Know 10 Refused D7. Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as? 18 A Republican 39 A Democrat 34 An Independent 2 Other 3 None 4 Refused D8. Generally speaking, would you characterize your political views as being...? 38 Conservative 37 Moderate 16 Liberal 6 Don t Know 3 Refused AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 15

Additional Data Tables for Minnesota (n=424) Q3. I m going to read you a list of things that the current health care reform plan in the House of Representatives does, and for each one, please tell me how convincing a reason it is to support the plan in Congress. Percentages of respondents who found the element a very or somewhat convincing reason to support the plan in Congress. Total Age 50-64 Age 65+ Rep. Dem. Ind. N=424 N=202 N=215 N=76 N=167 N=143 It would ensure that you can keep your current 83 82 84 71 91 81 health insurance coverage if you are happy with it. It requires insurance companies to cover routine 83 85 81 71 92 80 checkups and preventive care, like screening for diabetes, prostate cancer, and osteoporosis, with no extra charges. It would ensure that people can see the doctor of 84 83 85 69 94 81 their choice. It would prevent insurance companies from 77 77 77 61 86 78 denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions. It allows Medicare to negotiate lower prescription 80 82 79 63 91 78 drug prices with pharmaceutical companies. It assures doctors that Medicare will compensate 78 76 79 62 88 76 them fairly for treating seniors, so doctors don t stop seeing Medicare patients. It protects Medicare benefits for seniors. 75 72 79 63 87 70 It ensures seniors aren t paying thousands of 73 73 74 64 83 70 dollars in out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs and closes the Medicare doughnut hole. It would stop insurance companies from charging 76 75 77 59 90 73 you much higher premiums based on your age. It would require everyone to have some form of 75 77 73 55 90 71 health insurance, with subsidies for those who can t afford it. It aggressively cracks down on waste, fraud, and 74 71 77 57 84 72 abuse in Medicare It prevents insurance companies from putting a 73 75 72 57 88 68 cap on the amount of health care you can receive in a given year or over the course of your life. It provides a voluntary program to help people 68 71 65 49 78 63 plan ahead so they can afford long-term care services and supports. It would provide people a choice of affordable 69 70 69 42 88 65 private insurance options and a public plan administered by the federal government if they don t have health insurance or can t afford it. It would be paid for in part by a tax on married 62 60 62 40 82 51 couples who earn at least $1 million a year or individuals who earn at least $500,000 per year. It would reduce the federal budget deficit by $104 billion over the next 10 years 58 56 60 38 74 52 AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 16

Q4. Now I d like to read you some reasons that people might give for trusting AARP about health care reform. For each one, please tell me if you believe it is a very convincing, somewhat convincing, not that convincing, or not at all convincing reason to trust AARP s position on health care reform. How convincing a reason is this to trust to AARP s position on health care reform? Percentages of respondents who consider AARP reputational statements a convincing reason to trust AARP s position on health care reform Total Age 50-64 Age 65+ Rep. Dem. Ind. N=424 N=202 N=215 N=76 N=167 N=143 AARP monitors how new laws and programs 90 92 88 81 96 87 are implemented, so they do not end up hurting seniors and people over 50. As a non-partisan organization, AARP is an 87 87 87 78 96 82 independent voice fighting for the best interests of people over 50. With nearly 40 million members, AARP has 83 82 85 73 93 79 the power to ensure that any health care reform bill protects Americans over 50. AARP has always fought to protect its members and wouldn t support any reform unless it was good for people over 50. 88 88 87 76 95 86 Q5. Now I m going to read you a statement you might hear from AARP about health care reform and get your opinion on it. In the health care debate, AARP has chosen a side yours. That s why we re endorsing the health care reform plan in the House of Representatives. Because it ensures you re not denied insurance because of pre-existing conditions or age. It ensures your health care doesn t take a back seat to insurance companies and no one not insurance companies or the government comes between you and the doctors and specialists you choose. Most important, AARP endorses reform because it protects seniors benefits and Medicare so it s there for seniors now and for future generations. AARP is fighting for you because your health is worth fighting for. Given what you ve heard about the bill and AARP support, do you support or oppose President Obama and Congress s plan to reform health care? Percentages of respondents who support or oppose President Obama and Congress plan to reform health care Total Age 50-64 Age 65+ Rep. Dem. Ind. N=424 N=202 N=215 N=76 N=167 N=143 Strongly support 41 40 42 10 62 36 Somewhat support 26 28 23 20 27 30 Somewhat oppose 9 9 9 20 3 10 Strongly oppose 18 19 18 47 4 20 Don t know/refused 6 3 8 4 6 4 AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives 17