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Bloomberg Politics poll: Majority of Americans say PPACA should get time to work

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(Bloomberg Politics) — It may come as news to Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz, but a majority of Americans is not, in his words, dreaming of “repealing every word of Obamacare.”

Fifty-one percent of U.S. adults say that while the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) may still require small changes, “we should see how it works,” according to a new Bloomberg Politics poll. Twelve percent said President Barack Obama’s signature legislative accomplishment should be left alone, 35 percent said it should be repealed, and two percent said they weren’t sure.

“If we’re trying to have a better society, we have to look out for all people, not just certain segments,” said Sherry DuPree, 67, a retired professor from Gainesville, Fla., who participated in the poll. “It has brought people who were on the street into the doctor’s.”

The number of Americans who want the law erased has remained fairly consistent over the past five years since Obama signed it. In July 2010, 37 percent said the law should be repealed. Two years later, 34 percent favored repealing the law.

Approximately 16.4 million Americans have gained health insurance since PPACA was enacted, the government says.

Views of the law are sharply divided by party. Sixty-eight percent of self-identified Republicans said they supported repeal, as did 37 percent of independents and just 10 percent of Democrats.

See also: Iowa Republicans: PPACA and terrorism sizzle while social issues still matter

Dell Stone, 83, says she “certainly hopes” the law gets repealed. She blames limits on medical testing in the act for her need to take cholesterol medication for three months this year after her cardiologist wasn’t willing to repeat a seemingly inaccurate but very high reading.

“The doctors are very dissatisfied, and many of them are not able to give their patients the attention that they feel that they need because they can’t have too many appointments, too many tests,” said Stone, a retired elementary school principal from Alexander City, Ala.

The poll was conducted April 6-8 by Selzer & Co. of Des Moines, Iowa, among 1,008 U.S. adults. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. Read the full poll questions and methodology here.

Margins of error are higher among subgroups, including +/-6 percentage points for Republicans, +/-5 percentage points for independents, and +/-5.6 percentage points for Democrats.

See also: PPACA threatens Roberts’ effort to shield court from politics


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