Taking a closer look at physician engagement in the political process: physician voting behaviors
Press Release

Taking a closer look at physician engagement in the political process: physician voting behaviors

January 10, 2022

Boston, MA – A new study investigated changes in physicians’ voting behavior in modern day elections using nationally representative data. Results of the study, “Analysis of Reported Voting Behaviors of US Physicians, 2000-2020,” appear online in JAMA Network Open on January 10.

Physicians in the U.S. have historically been shown to vote at lower rates than the general population, though recent evidence of their voting behavior and civic engagement has been limited. With the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic and diverging visions for the American healthcare system between the two political parties, researchers sought to better understand physicians’ engagement with the political process.

The team utilized data from U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey Voting and Registration Supplement, a biennial, nationally representative household survey, and examined U.S. physicians who participated in the survey between 2000 and 2020. The study provides a needed update on recent changes in physician voting behavior on a national level and across time.

“Physicians represent an important voice and carry valuable expertise related to patient care and population health,” said first author Ahmed Ahmed, a third-year medical student at Harvard Medical School. “Their engagement in the political process, particularly through voting, is key for shaping public policy, which affects patient health and clinical practice.”

The researchers found that voter turnout among U.S. physicians has grown over the past two decades. Physicians were just as likely to vote as the general population in the recent midterm (2018) and more likely to vote in the latest presidential (2020) election. Physicians in states that allowed no-excuse mail-in voting had higher turnout than in those states that did not.

Though our work highlights growth in civic and voting engagement among physicians, it also shows that barriers like registration and work schedule conflicts still remain. Our findings help identify potential opportunities for further growth through policy changes and targeted interventions."
Xiaojuan Li, PhD

“Though our work highlights growth in civic and voting engagement among physicians, it also shows that barriers like registration and work schedule conflicts still remain,” said senior author Xiaojuan Li, PhD, Instructor of Population Medicine at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute. “Our findings help identify potential opportunities for further growth through policy changes and targeted interventions.”


About Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute's Department of Population Medicine
The Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute's Department of Population Medicine is a unique collaboration between Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and Harvard Medical School. Created in 1992, it is the first appointing medical school department in the United States based in a health plan.  The Institute focuses on improving health care delivery and population health through research and education, in partnership with health plans, delivery systems, and public health agencies.

INVESTIGATORS

Xiaojuan Li