Low-income residents in three states view Medicaid as equal to or better than private coverage, support expansion.

Expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act to millions of low-income adults has been controversial, yet little is known about what these Americans themselves think about Medicaid. We conducted a telephone survey in late 2013 of nearly 3,000 low-income adults in three Southern states--Arkansas, Kentucky, and Texas--that have adopted different approaches to the options for expansion. Nearly 80 percent of our sample in all three states favored Medicaid expansion, and approximately two-thirds of uninsured respondents said that they planned to apply for either Medicaid or subsidized private coverage in 2014. Yet awareness of their state's actual expansion plans was low. Most viewed having Medicaid as better than being uninsured and at least as good as private insurance in overall quality and affordability. While the debate over Medicaid expansion continues, support for expansion is strong among low-income adults, and the perceived quality of Medicaid coverage is high.

[1]  B. Sommers,et al.  A potential new data source for assessing the impacts of health reform: Evaluating the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. , 2014, Healthcare.

[2]  Bill J. Wright,et al.  The role of stigma in access to health care for the poor. , 2014, The Milbank quarterly.

[3]  B. Sommers,et al.  The poverty-reducing effect of Medicaid. , 2013, Journal of health economics.

[4]  S. Rosenbaum,et al.  Using Medicaid to buy private health insurance--the great new experiment? , 2013, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  Genevieve M. Kenney,et al.  Health status, risk factors, and medical conditions among persons enrolled in Medicaid vs uninsured low-income adults potentially eligible for Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. , 2013, JAMA.

[6]  A. Zaslavsky,et al.  The Oregon experiment--effects of Medicaid on clinical outcomes. , 2013, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  A. Epstein,et al.  U.S. governors and the Medicaid expansion--no quick resolution in sight. , 2013, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  Prevalence and Predictors of Underinsurance Among Low-Income Adults , 2013, Journal of general internal medicine.

[9]  A. Epstein,et al.  Mortality and access to care among adults after state Medicaid expansions. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.

[10]  A. Carroll,et al.  Our flawed but beneficial Medicaid program. , 2011, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  K. Kent,et al.  Effect of insurance type on adverse cardiac events after percutaneous coronary intervention. , 2011, American Journal of Cardiology.

[12]  Scott M Langevin,et al.  The impact of health insurance status on the survival of patients with head and neck cancer , 2010, Cancer.

[13]  Jacob Alex Klerman,et al.  An examination of the Medicaid undercount in the current population survey: preliminary results from record linking. , 2009, Health services research.

[14]  Rebecca M. Nyman,et al.  Medicaid undercount and bias to estimates of uninsurance: new estimates and existing evidence. , 2007, Health services research.

[15]  J Z Ayanian,et al.  The relation between health insurance coverage and clinical outcomes among women with breast cancer. , 1994, The New England journal of medicine.