New KFF/MTV Sexual Health Campaign: Survey Snapshot

Published: Mar 31, 2002

This survey snapshot is part of the new KFF/MTV Fight for Your Rights: Protect Yourself (FFYR), MTV’s campaign to inform and empower young people on the issues surrounding their sexual health, including HIV and AIDS, other sexually transmitted disease (STDs) and teen pregnancy. The new initiative includes special programming, public service messages, online and grassroots components, and an extensive resource and referral service.

Poll Finding

Health News Index – March/April 2002

Published: Mar 31, 2002

Health News Index March/April, 2002

The March/April edition of the Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard School of Public Health Health News Index includes questions about major health stories covered in the news, including the recent coverage of mammogram efficacy, the Institute of Medicine report on racial disparities in the health care system, and prescription drug discount cards. The Health News Index is designed to help news media and people in the health field gain a better understanding of which health stories Americans are following and what they understand about those issues.

National Survey of Physicians Part II: Doctors and Prescription Drugs

Published: Mar 31, 2002

With attention focused recently on direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs, findings from a new National Survey of Physicians by the Kaiser Family Foundation shed light on another factor in drug promotion that has received less attention — promotion to physicians. Most physicians say they have received perks from a drug company representative, including free drug samples, meals, tickets to events, free travel and other incentives. When asked their views on information they receive from drug company representatives, nearly three-fourths say it is very or somewhat useful, and more than eight in ten say the information is very or somewhat accurate. Survey findings also show that physicians see several factors influencing patients awareness of drugs. More than six in 10 doctors say prescription drug advertisements influence patients to talk to their physicians at least somewhat often , and even more doctors say the general news media and friends and family members are frequent influences.

National Survey of Small Businesses

Published: Mar 30, 2002

Survey highlights/chartpack from a new survey that finds that two-thirds of small employers say that they are dissatisfied with the cost of health care and health insurance, and about one-third of small businesses that now offer insurance say they are likely to increase the share of costs borne by employees in the next year.

Poll Finding

National Survey of Small Businesses – Toplines

Published: Mar 30, 2002

National Survey of Small Businesses

Toplines from a new survey that finds that two-thirds of small employers say that they are dissatisfied with the cost of health care and health insurance, and about one-third of small businesses that now offer insurance say they are likely to increase the share of costs borne by employees in the next year.

National Survey of Small Businesses

Published: Mar 30, 2002

A survey finds that two-thirds of small employers say that they are dissatisfied with the cost of health care and health insurance, and about one-third of small businesses that now offer insurance say they are likely to increase the share of costs borne by employees in the next year.

Sex Education in the U.S.: Policy and Politics

Published: Mar 1, 2002

This issue brief examines the federal, state, and local policies that guide approaches to sex education today. It also examines recent research into community-level experiences and practices, as well as emerging evidence about the effectiveness of different types of sex education curricula.

Solvency or Affordability?  Ways to Measure Medicare’s Financial Health

Published: Mar 1, 2002

Solvency or Affordability? Ways to Measure Medicare’s Financial Health

This report examines different ways of measuring Medicare s financial health and considers their implications for the future of the program and the people it serves. Using an alternative measure of Medicare’s long-term affordability that focuses on workers’ capacity to absorb additional costs over time, the analysis concludes that the nation could afford to pay more for Medicare in the future without imposing an undue burden on working Americans.

National Survey of Physicians Part I: Doctors on Disparities in Medical Care

Published: Mar 1, 2002

Selected findings from the Kaiser Family Foundation’s forthcoming National Survey of Physicians reveal that most physicians are aware of racial disparities in medical treatment for specific conditions, but they don’t believe it is a widespread problem. In sharp contrast, African American physicians disagree with their fellow physicians with nearly eight in ten (77%) believing race and ethnicity impact how people are treated at least somewhat often. Physicians see insurance status as a key determinate of treatment within the health care system, with more than seven in ten (72%) saying that the system very or somewhat often treats people unfairly based on their health insurance status. The survey of 2,608 physicians also includes findings on views of male and female physicians and views of Asian and Latino physicians on disparities based on a variety of other demographic characteristics.

Highlights and Chartpack (.pdf)