Single-payer healthcare is a system where every citizen pays the government to provide core healthcare services for all residents. Under this system the government may provide the care themselves or pay a private healthcare provider to do so. In a single-payer system all residents receive healthcare regardless of age, income or health status. Countries with single-payer healthcare systems include the U.K., Canada, Taiwan, Israel, France, Belarus, Russia and Ukraine.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Response rates from 625 National Conservatism voters.
56% Yes |
44% No |
36% Yes |
41% No |
8% Yes, this system guarantees healthcare for everyone |
2% No, the government should not be involved in healthcare |
8% Yes, but allow people to use private insurance |
1% No, this system is too expensive |
4% Yes, private companies should not be able to profit off of healthcare |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 625 National Conservatism voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 625 National Conservatism voters.
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Unique answers from National Conservatism voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9MSNGWT6mos6MO
Yes, but not a single provider. I believe people working in the healthcare field know better than politicians on how to provide healthcare. Key performance metrics need to be aligned with profit margins.
@9LZ3NDS7mos7MO
Yes, but partial: part of the cost should be given to the individual depending on the type of healthcare, as well as characteristics such as obesity rate, status as smoker, cause of injury, income, etc...
@94VPCVL2yrs2Y
@94MGBLZ2yrs2Y
lo supporto se qualsiasi persona può usufruirne ad un costo limitato e senza tempi di attesta lunghissimi
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