Nearly three-fourths of U.S. adults said that the government is not doing enough to ensure access to affordable healthcare, a new West Health-Gallup Healthcare survey found.
The survey revealed that 73 percent of Americans said that the government was not doing enough, compared to 12 percent who said that it was doing about the right amount. Seven percent said the government was doing too much, while another seven percent said they didn’t know.
The poll, conducted from Sept. 9 to 16, comes as the Biden administration released a rule last month requiring health insurers to cover mental health care and addiction services just as they cover other conditions.
The survey showed that most Americans, 79 percent, either strongly or somewhat support the law, compared to the 14 percent that either strongly or somewhat oppose it.
At the same time, 50 percent of adults said that they slightly trust or do not trust at all that insurance companies would provide adequate access and coverage for mental healthcare services, even if the government increased efforts to follow the law.
The survey also showed that large majorities of Democrats, 87 percent, and independents, 73 percent, said that the government wasn’t doing enough to ensure access to affordable mental healthcare. Fifty-seven percent of Republicans said the government wasn’t doing enough.
The poll revealed that women were 10 percentage points more likely to think that government isn’t doing enough compared to men, 78 percent to 68 percent.
When asked how likely respondents thought access to affordable mental healthcare would be in the next five years, 60 percent said that it was either not very likely or not likely at all.
The survey also revealed that women, Black and Hispanic adults seemed more optimistic about future access to affordable mental healthcare.
The poll surveyed 3,660 U.S. adults. The margin of error is 2 percentage points for results based on the full sample at the 95 percent confidence level.