| Literature DB >> 21931604 |
Kristin M Huntoon1, Colin J McCluney, Christopher A Scannell, Elizabeth A Wiley, Richard Bruno, Allen Andrews, Paul Gorman.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Over one year after passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), legislators, healthcare experts, physicians, and the general public continue to debate the implications of the law and its repeal. The PPACA will have a significant impact on future physicians, yet medical student perspectives on the legislation have not been well documented.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21931604 PMCID: PMC3172206 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic Characteristics of Respondents.
| Characteristics | Respondents N (%) | AAMC data N (%) |
|
| 1232/6982 (17.9%) | 79070 |
|
| 25.9±3.5 | |
|
| 634 (51.5%) | 37499 (47.4%) |
|
| ||
| MS1 | 397 (32.2%) | |
| MS2 | 296 (24.0%) | |
| MS3 | 281 (22.8%) | |
| MS4 | 213 (17.3%) | |
| Fellow/PhD/MPH | 46 (3.7%) | |
|
| ||
| Cuban | 4 (0.3%) | 585 (0.7%) |
| Mexican | 33 (2.7%) | 2058 (2.6%) |
| Spanish, other | 34 (2.8%) | 3865 (4.9%) |
| Not Spanish/Hispanic/Latino | 1161 (94.2%) | 71446 (90.4%) |
| American Indian | 9 (0.7%) | 654 (0.8%) |
| Asian | 192 (15.6%) | 17375 (22.0%) |
| Black, African American | 33 (2.7%) | 5548 (7.02%) |
| Native Hawaiian | 1 (0.1%) | 240 (0.3%) |
| Other race | 67 (5.4%) | 3655 (4.6%) |
| White | 925 (75.1%) | 47525 (60.1%) |
|
| ||
| Very Conservative | 12 (1.0%) | |
| Conservative | 159 (12.9%) | |
| Centrist | 209 (17.0%) | |
| None | 124 (10.1%) | |
| Liberal | 555 (45.0%) | |
| Very Liberal | 174 (14.1%) | |
|
| ||
| Primary Care (Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, OB/GYN) | 451 (36.6%) | |
| Internal Medicine Specialty | 214 (17.4%) | |
| General Surgery | 45 (3.7%) | |
| Surgical Sub-Specialty | 178 (14.4%) | |
| Other/Undecided | 345 (28.0%) | |
|
| ||
| 0 | 401 (32.5%) | |
| 1 | 384 (31.2%) | |
| 2+ | 447 (36.3%) |
= Data was only obtained for gender and race comparisons.
Responses about the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).
| Response (%) | 95% CI | p value for trend | ||
|
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 664 (53.9%) | 51.1%–56.7% | p<0.001 |
| Undecided | 196 (15.9%) | 14.0%–18.1% | ||
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 372 (30.2%) | 27.7%–32.8% | ||
|
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 1168 (94.8%) | 93.4%–95.9% | p<0.001 |
| Undecided | 45 (3.7%) | 2.7%–4.9% | ||
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 19 (1.5%) | 1.0%–2.4% | ||
|
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 387 (31.4%) | 28.9%–34.1% | p<0.001 |
| Undecided | 588 (47.7%) | 44.9%–50.5% | ||
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 257 (20.9%) | 18.7%–23.2% | ||
|
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 833 (67.6%) | 64.9%–70.2% | p<0.001 |
| Undecided | 319 (25.9%) | 23.5%–28.4% | ||
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 80 (6.5%) | 5.2%–8.0% | ||
|
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 229 (18.6%) | 16.5%–20.9% | p<0.001 |
| Undecided | 559 (45.4%) | 42.6%–48.2% | ||
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 444 (36.0%) | 33.4%–38.8% | ||
|
| I do not support PPACA because it did not go far enough. | 75 (6.1%) | 4.9%–7.6% | p<0.001 |
| I do not support PPACA because it went too far. | 171 (13.9%) | 12.1%–15.9% | ||
| I support PPACA and think that it went far enough. | 27 (2.2%) | 1.5%–3.2% | ||
| I support PPACA but think it went too far. | 70 (5.7%) | 4.5%–7.1% | ||
| I support PPACA but think more reform is needed. | 889 (72.2%) | 69.6%–74.6% | ||
|
| Yes | 185 (15.0%) | 13.1%–17.1% | p<0.001 |
| No | 725 (58.8%) | 56.1%–61.6% | ||
| Undecided | 322 (26.1%) | 23.8%–28.7% |