Poll shows voters sounding the alarm on health insurance companies and PBMs
Four key findings from the registered voter survey of 2,000 voters about the barriers to care imposed by health insurance companies and PBMs.
Four key findings from the registered voter survey of 2,000 voters about the barriers to care imposed by health insurance companies and PBMs.
Many Americans battle with an illness every day, but unfortunately for some, their illness is not the only battle they face. A recent Morning Consult/PhRMA poll of 2,004 registered voters shows that Americans are frustrated by the hurdles imposed by insurance companies and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) that can stand between them and their medicines, and they want lawmakers to advance solutions that increase transparency and require insurance companies and PBMs to share rebates or discounts they receive directly with patients to lower out-of-pocket costs at the pharmacy counter.
Here are four key findings from the registered voter survey:
1. The top health care issue for voters is out-of-pocket costs set by insurance companies and PBMs.
2. Voters are facing affordability challenges to accessing health care.
3. As voters learn more about PBMs and their tactics, their concerns grow.
4. Voters support patient-centered solutions that actually address their concerns – like transparency, predictability and lowering out-of-pocket costs.
As policymakers consider solutions to address patients’ health care affordability challenges ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, they should listen to voters and prioritize real concerns and challenges Americans say they face. Learn more about how we’re working to improve the health care system at PhRMA.org/BetterWay.
This poll was conducted by Morning Consult, on behalf of PhRMA, between April 27-May 2, 2022 among a sample of 2004 Registered Voters. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Registered Voters based on gender by age, educational attainment, race, marital status, home ownership, race by educational attainment, 2020 presidential vote, and region. Results from the full survey have a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
1. “out-of-pocket costs not covered by insurance” refers to all costs that are not reimbursed by insurance.