Physician Views on the Public Health Insurance Option and Medicare Expansions 

Survey published in the New England Journal of Medicine

See survey: http://www.rwjf.org/files/research/48408physician.pdf 


Robert Wood Johnson Foundation survey shows physicians support reform plan that 
includes both public and private options.


A RWJF survey summarized in the September 14, 2009 edition of the New England 
Journal of Medicine shows that 62.9 percent of physicians nationwide support 
proposals to expand health care coverage that include both public and private 
insurance options—where people under the age of 65 would have the choice of 
enrolling in a new public health insurance plan (like Medicare) or in private 
plans. 

The survey shows that just 27.3 percent of physicians support a new program 
that does not include a public option and instead provides subsidies for 
low-income people to purchase private insurance. Only 9.6 percent of doctors 
nationwide support a system where a Medicare-like public program is created in 
lieu of any private insurance. 

A majority of physicians (58%) also support expanding Medicare eligibility to 
those between the ages of 55 and 64.

In every region of the country, a majority of physicians supported a 
combination of public and private options, as did physicians who identified 
themselves as primary care providers, surgeons, or other medical 
sub-specialists. 

Among those who identified themselves as members of the American Medical 
Association, 62.2 percent favored both the public and private options.

The survey was conducted between June 25 and September 3, 2009 by Salomeh 
Keyhani, M.D., M.P.H., and Alex Federman, M.D., M.P.H., of the Mount Sinai 
School of Medicine in New York City. While the survey was conducted in several 
"waves" over a tumultuous summer for the health reform debate, no statistically 
significant differences were identified in physician responses throughout the 
summer. 

http://www.rwjf.org/healthreform/product.jsp?id=48408



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