» Articles » PMID: 21948818

Who Deserves Health Care? The Effects of Causal Attributions and Group Cues on Public Attitudes About Responsibility for Health Care Costs

Overview
Specialty Health Services
Date 2011 Sep 28
PMID 21948818
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This research investigates the impact of cues about ascriptive group characteristics (race, class, gender) and the causes of ill health (health behaviors, inborn biological traits, social systemic factors) on beliefs about who deserves society's help in paying for the costs of medical treatment. Drawing on data from three original vignette experiments embedded in a nationally representative survey of American adults, we find that respondents are reluctant to blame or deny societal support in response to explicit cues about racial attributes--but equally explicit cues about the causal impact of individual behaviors on health have large effects on expressed attitudes. Across all three experiments, a focus on individual behavioral causes of illness is associated with increased support for individual responsibility for health care costs and lower support for government-financed health insurance. Beliefs about social groups and causal attributions are, however, tightly intertwined. We find that when groups suffering ill health are defined in racial, class, or gender terms, Americans differ in their attribution of health disparities to individual behaviors versus biological or systemic factors. Because causal attributions also affect health policy opinions, varying patterns of causal attribution may reinforce group stereotypes and undermine support for universal access to health care.

Citing Articles

The I-frame vs. S-frame: how neoliberalism has led behavioral sciences astray.

Andreas M, Jabakhanji S Front Psychol. 2023; 14:1247703.

PMID: 37744582 PMC: 10517055. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1247703.


Strategic Messaging to Promote Policies that Advance Racial Equity: What Do We Know, and What Do We Need to Learn?.

Niederdeppe J, Liu J, Spruill M, Lewis Jr N, Moore S, Fowler E Milbank Q. 2023; 101(2):349-425.

PMID: 37096590 PMC: 10262382. DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12651.


Personal Responsibility for Health: Exploring Together with Lay Persons.

Asada Y, Brown M, McNally M, Murphy A, Urquhart R, Warner G Public Health Ethics. 2022; 15(2):160-174.

PMID: 36483293 PMC: 9719321. DOI: 10.1093/phe/phac009.


Making Pain Research More Inclusive: Why and How.

Janevic M, Mathur V, Booker S, Morais C, Meints S, Yeager K J Pain. 2021; 23(5):707-728.

PMID: 34678471 PMC: 9018873. DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2021.10.004.


Disabled but not deserving? The perceived deservingness of disability welfare benefit claimants.

Baumberg Geiger B J Eur Soc Policy. 2021; 31(3):337-351.

PMID: 34295021 PMC: 8267076. DOI: 10.1177/0958928721996652.