Abstract

Previous research shows that generalized trust, the belief that most people can be trusted, is conducive to people's health. However, only recently have longitudinal studies suggested an additional reciprocal pathway from health back to trust. Drawing on a diverse body of literature that shows how egalitarian social policy contributes to the promotion of generalized trust, we hypothesize that this other ‘reverse’ pathway could be sensitive to health insurance context. Drawing on nationally representative US panel data from the General Social Survey, we examine whether the Affordable Care Act of 2010 could have had influence on the deteriorating impact of worsening self-rated health (SRH) on generalized trust. Firstly, using two-wave panel data (2008–2010, N = 1403) and employing random effects regression models, we show that a lack of health insurance coverage negatively determines generalized trust in the United States. However, this association is attenuated when additionally controlling for (perceived) income inequality. Secondly, utilizing data from two separate three-wave panel studies from the US General Social Survey (2006–10; N = 1652; 2010–2014; N = 1187), we employ fixed-effects linear regression analyses to control for unobserved heterogeneity from time-invariant factors. We demonstrate that worsening SRH was a stronger predictor for a decrease in generalized trust prior (2006–2010) to the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. Further, the negative effect of fair/poor SRH seen in the 2006–2010 data becomes attenuated in the 2010–2014 panel data. We thus find evidence for a substantial weakening of the previously established negative impact of decreasing SRH on generalized trust, coinciding with the most significant US healthcare reforms in decades. Social policy and healthcare policy implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • On 23rd March 2010, Barack Obama as the United States (US) President signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA)

  • We further argue that the negative impact of worsening health on generalized trust could be buffered by social policy

  • Generalized trust was significantly higher among respondents with good self-rated health (SRH) (95%CI 1⁄4 0.482e0.526) than among those reporting poor SRH (95%CI 1⁄4 0.303e0.376)

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Summary

Introduction

On 23rd March 2010, Barack Obama as the United States (US) President signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). The overarching aims of the ACA were to expand healthcare coverage, to lower healthcare costs, and to make health insurance companies more accountable (Medicaid.gov, 2017). Recent research shows that it was young adults up to 26 years, minorities, and low-income earners that benefitted most from the ACA in terms of improved self-rated health (SRH) and greater access to affordable healthcare (Sommers et al, 2013, 2015). By 2014 e the year coinciding with the last observations of our panel data studies e at least an additional 20 million people had gained healthcare coverage (Blumenthal and Collins, 2014).

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