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Eggs, housing, . . . and healthcare? A new survey found that healthcare has never been so unaffordable for Americans this decade
On May 2, 2025
Not even a month ago, on April 4, the results of the West Health and Gallup poll survey, conducted from mid-November to late December last year, were published, revealing that quality, affordable healthcare eludes 35 percent of Americans (representing some 91 million adults), a four-point jump from 2023 and the highest mark since 2021. Meanwhile, approximately 29 million Americans, or 11% of those surveyed, reported that they lacked the means to afford medication and care as recently as over the past three months. Just as unnerving—but most certainly not surprising—is that the disheartening trend has been most prominent among lower-income individuals (those who belong to families earning less than $24,000 per year) as well as Hispanic and Black Americans; conversely, there has been negligible change in this regard among mid- to high-income earners and whites. Hence, one reason why there is the ever-widening healthcare social disparity plaguing our nation.
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