Four in 10 Americans say they have trouble paying for drugs or skip prescriptions or cut pills due to cost

New USA Today/Kaiser/Harvard Poll Finds the Public Sees Real Benefits From Prescription Drugs, But Feels that They Cost Too Much and that Drug Companies Care Too Much About Profits

From the Kaiser Family Foundation, March 04, 2008

A new poll, the third in a series conducted jointly by USA Today and public opinion researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health, finds Americans greatly value prescription drugs’ potential benefits for their families, but most believe they cost too much money and many struggle to pay for needed medicines.

Four in 10 Americans (and half of those regularly taking at least one medication) report experiencing at least one of three cost-related concerns in their family: 16 percent say it is a "serious" problem to pay for prescription drugs; 29 percent say they have not filled a prescription in the past two years because of the cost; and 23 percent say they have cut pills in half or skipped doses in order to make a medication last longer. People are most likely to report one of these three issues if they lack drug coverage (52 percent), if they have low incomes (54 percent) or if they take four or more drugs regularly (59 percent).

The survey finds that while the public values the products drug companies produce, they do not like what they charge and are suspicious of their motivation. Nearly eight in 10 Americans say that the cost of prescription drugs is unreasonable, and seven in 10 say pharmaceutical companies are too concerned about making profits and not concerned enough about helping people. Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of the public say that there is not enough government regulation to limit the price of drugs. Nearly six in 10 say insurers should only pay for new drugs if they are proven to be not just safe but also more effective than existing ones.

At the same time, the public overwhelmingly believes that recent advances in prescription drugs provide benefits. Nearly three-quarters (73 percent) say that prescription drugs developed over the past 20 years have made the lives of people in the U.S. better, and nearly two-thirds (63 percent) say the same about their own and their family members’ lives. In addition, six in 10 (59 percent) say prescription drugs reduce the need for expensive medical procedures and hospitalizations.

Overall, the public has mixed opinions of pharmaceutical companies, with 47 percent viewing the industry favorably and 44 percent unfavorably. Drug companies are viewed slightly more favorably than health insurers (40 percent favorable), but significantly less than doctors (81 percent favorable).

Despite recent controversies, more than half the public (55 percent) thinks pharmaceutical companies do enough to test and monitor the safety of their drugs, and the same share (55 percent) trust pharmaceutical companies at least somewhat to quickly notify the public about safety concerns. Majorities also think that pharmaceutical companies act in an ethical way when testing their products on people (62 percent) and on animals (56 percent).

Other key findings include:

The nationally representative telephone survey was conducted between January 3 and January 23 among 1,695 adults ages 18 and older, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. USA Today this week is running news stories drawing on the poll’s results. Earlier surveys in the USA Today/Kaiser/Harvard partnership addressed health care costs and the impact of cancer on families. Full results of the new poll are available at http://www.kff.org/kaiserpolls/pomr030408pkg.cfm .

For more information, please contact Craig Palosky at cpalosky@kff.org or (202) 347-5270, or Kate Schoen at kschoen@kff.org or (650) 854-9400.

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