Utah Voters Say Healthcare is 2016’s Top Priority

Utah Foundation LogoA research brief published by Utah Foundation shows 69% of the more than 800 Utah voters surveyed for the Utah Priorities Project earlier this year ranked healthcare as an issue of top concern – 4 or 5 on a 5-point scale. 

That was enough to push it to the top of the Project’s top ten list as the most significant issue in the survey, ahead of air quality, K-12 education and state taxes and government spending.

Healthcare was also on the top ten list at 4th place in 2012, the last year the Utah Priorities Project was conducted. This year, however, more voters listed it higher and pushed it into the top spot. Utah Foundation Research Analyst Christopher Collard, the author of the brief, says election debates have increased interest in this issue. “We think there was a little bit of additional interest in healthcare this election cycle because of the debate in the state legislature over the expansion of Medicaid and also just the rising cost of health care.”

The cost of health care was the most significant worry expressed in the survey, and while hospital costs and insurance premiums continue to rise in Utah, the state also has the distinction of having some of the lowest healthcare costs in the United States.

Asked about the findings of the research brief, Vivian Lee, the University of Utah’s Senior Vice-President for Health Sciences, said, “Utah has the lowest healthcare costs per capita in the country, and we are consistently one of the healthiest, around six or seven in the country.” She said Utah’s young population is one reason, but also praised efforts by health care providers. “Intermountain has been known for many years for really using their data to improve efficiency and to keep costs down. The University of Utah is also, among all the university hospitals in the country, one of the lowest cost providers, so our healthcare systems are very cost-effective.”

One area where Utah was not doing as well as other states is in the number of uninsured residents. Jason Stevenson of the Utah Health Policy Project said, “We’re about 10½ percent and the national average is about 8 or 9 percent. [It] means we’re falling behind and we still have many Utahns, who, when they get sick or injured, really don’t have an affordable option to get better.” As enrollment begins this week for the coming year in the health exchange under the federal Affordable Care Act, Stevenson noted that enrollment last year increased by 28 percent over the year before.

Greg Poulsen, the Senior Vice-President and Chief Strategy Officer for Intermountain Health Care, says the ACA system needs improvement. “Hopefully, in the next twelve months we can make the structural changes that are necessary so the system can be viable, hopefully more viable going beyond next year.”

Audio of these reactions to the issues raised in the Utah Priorities Project research brief on healthcare are available in the Utah Thrives podcast at http://www.utahfoundation.org/2016/11/utah-thrives-healthcare/

As the Utah Priorities Project concludes for 2016, Utah Foundation Steve Kroes summarized the effort. “It offers a guide to facts about issues that Utah voters told us they care most about,” he said. “In a year of partisan rancor, it’s a source of non-partisan information about the issues that really matter. That gives voters an opportunity to choose the candidates who represent their views best.”

Research briefs on each of the top ten issues identified in this year’s Utah Priorities Project are available on the Utah Foundation website, http://www.utahfoundation.org/priorities-project-2016/