12 December 2011
The Affordable Care Act—Engaging, Educating, and Empowering WomenTop Take-Aways
Strategic RecommendationsRecommended Communications Strategies—September 2011
Goal: To boost support for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) to a solid majority among voters by informing, persuading and mobilizing those women most likely to increase their overall approval and intensity of support. Topic: The health of American women and children. Narrative: For too long our health care system has undervalued Middle Class Americans, especially women and children, in favor of the wealthy and the profits of insurance companies. We now have consumer protections and services that support families. Proactive Strategies:
Messaging Recommendations
2. Develop personal stories and pitch to consumer and news-you-can-use media, bloggers, women’s magazines, etc. with specific audiences in mind. 3. Cultivate your social media networks with Facebook entries, tweets, texting and emails. Messaging
Broad Prevention - Starting this year, all new insurance plans must cover key prevention services, like contraception, well-woman exams, and breast and cervical cancer screenings, which many women have put off or sacrificed because of the cost involved. This will save thousands of lives every year and bring down costs because it is far more effective to prevent an unintended pregnancy and to detect cancer early. Covering preventive care as basic health care, including family planning services, contraception, and birth control, is important to good health care for women. (88% Convincing/ 64% Very Convincing) Secure/Congress with no co-pay - The new healthcare law will provide basic preventive health care and women's health services with no co-pay, and make health care coverage more secure by ensuring that working families cannot be denied coverage due to a pre-existing condition, or lose their coverage or be forced into bankruptcy when someone gets sick. It will also require that members of Congress get their health care coverage from the same plans as millions of Americans. (87% Convincing/ 56% Very Convincing) Protect Medicare - The new health care law will protect Medicare benefits for seniors and strengthen the program for future generations by aggressively cracking down on waste, fraud and abuse in Medicare, ending handouts to insurance companies, and providing free preventive care with no co-pay, including mammograms and women's health services so that we prevent costly emergency room visits and reduce health care costs in the long-run.*(92% Convincing/ 59% Very Convincing) Questions and AnswersStrategies to Inoculate Against Attacks by the Opposition and the Counterpunch
Based on the ongoing debate over the law, we can anticipate additional attacks on the Affordable Care Act and the recent women’s health care provisions. We win when we approach the issue effectively—and it is best to have pro-active messages that inoculate before the attack is heard. While we recommend a non-political consumer frame when informing women on the law, a political fight must be taken on simultaneously. Costs:Attack by Opposition: Health care costs are too expensive now – adding free birth control and contraceptive will cost too much. Response: Covering birth control as part of preventive coverage saves families $26 a month on average, helping families in these tough economic times (+11 points) Mandate:Attack by Opposition: Free contraceptives are another government mandate and now we have government micro-managing people's health care. Response: Birth control is basic preventive care because it respects others to make important life decisions and gives people more options over when and whether to have child (+30 points among women and +11 points among men)). Abortion:Attack by Opposition: Coverage of so-called contraception services for free is a back door way to have taxpayers pay for abortion-inducing drugs. Response: Coverage of birth control and contraception services with no co-pay helps prevent unintended pregnancies and reduces the need for abortions. (+25 points) Or, coverage of birth control and contraception services helps and respects women to make their own personal decisions and gives them more options about when and whether to have children. (Both about +20%) |


