"You've got a significant group of people who at the moment wouldn't do it, " said RobertBlendon, professor of health policy and political analysis at the Harvard School of Public Health, who led the study.
"They're people with health insurance, but it's not covering the co-pays, the deductibles, some of the drug costs, the dental care that may be needed, the home services, " says RobertBlendon, who runs polling programs for the Harvard School of Public Health.
Yet a new survey, conducted by RobertBlendon at the Harvard University School of Public Health, and the New York-based Commonwealth Fund, suggests that the British are much less unhappy with their health service than Americans, and see little reason to redesign their health-care system.