Abstract

IntroductionTo examine (1) what individuals know about the existing adult preventive service coverage provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and (2) which preventive services individuals think should be covered without cost sharing.MethodsAn online panel from Survey Monkey was used to obtain a sample of 2,990 adults age 18 and older in March 2015, analyzed 2015–2017. A 17-item survey instrument was designed and used to evaluate respondents’ knowledge of the adult preventive services provision of the ACA. Additionally, we asked whether various preventive services should be covered. The data include age, sex, race/ethnicity, and educational attainment as well as measures of political ideology, previous insurance status, the number of chronic conditions, and usual source of care.ResultsRespondents correctly answered 38.6% of the questions about existing coverage under the ACA, while on average respondents thought 12.1 of 15 preventive services should be covered (SD 3.5). Respondents were more knowledgeable about coverage for routine screenings, such as blood pressure (63.4% correct) than potentially stigmatizing screenings, such as for alcohol misuse (28.8% correct). Blood pressure screening received the highest support of coverage (89.8%) while coverage of gym memberships received the lowest support (59.4%). Individuals with conservative ideologies thought fewer services on average should be covered, but the difference was small—around one service less than those with liberal ideologies.ConclusionsOverwhelmingly, individuals think that most preventive services should be covered without cost sharing. Despite several years of coverage for preventive services, there is still confusion and lack of knowledge about which services are covered.

Highlights

  • To examine (1) what individuals know about the existing adult preventive service coverage provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and (2) which preventive services individuals think should be covered without cost sharing

  • Examining U.S public knowledge and preferences for adult preventive services coverage. Seven years after it was signed into law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA, hereafter ACA) has been the subject of several repeal attempts and an executive order to halt its enforcement and implementation as much as legally allowed.[1]

  • We examine the associations between the number and category of adult preventive services people think should be covered without cost sharing, political ideology and source of health insurance coverage

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Summary

Methods

An online panel from Survey Monkey was used to obtain a sample of 2,990 adults age 18 and older in March 2015, analyzed 2015–2017. The study data are from an online, cross-sectional, population-based survey we conducted in March 2015 (N = 2990) and analyzed between 2015 through 2017. SurveyMonkey administered the survey through its Audience Platform and SurveyMonkey Contribute (SMC) online research panel, a service provided by SurveyMonkey to assist customers in reaching a targeted audience for their surveys. The SMC online research panel was recruited from over 30 million people who answer SurveyMonkey surveys each month. SurveyMonkey automatically computes the number of panelists to invite to take the survey experiment based on 1) the number of finished responses requested; 2) the response rates of individual survey respondents; and 3) the availability of survey respondents who meet the study’s targeting criteria (aged 18 or older).

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