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60 Percent of New Yorkers Say State on ‘Wrong Track’ (Poll)

60 percent of New Yorkers say state on ‘wrong track,’ according to a survey of registered voters.

by Empire Center

Three in five New Yorkers (60 percent) say the state is on the wrong track, up from 55 percent earlier this year, according to the latest Empire Index poll of registered voters by the Empire Center for Public Policy.

The survey of 1,003 New York registered voters (margin of error: 3 percent) was conducted by Morning Consult. The toplines and crosstabs can be viewed here. The poll follows up on earlier opinion research conducted by the Empire Center in January and February. 

Notable findings on taxes and spending included the following:

Two-thirds of voters (66 percent) supported allowing doctors licensed in other states to practice medicine in New York, with just 20 percent opposed—a reform that Albany lawmakers have resisted.

The poll also found 72 percent of New Yorkers have received care from either a nurse practitioner or a physician assistant, healthcare roles that could potentially be expanded by the Legislature to make care more accessible and less costly.

Asked about their family’s experience with the healthcare system, 70 percent of respondents described the “overall quality of healthcare” as “good” or “excellent.” Hospitals also received high marks, with 69 percent saying experiences had been “good” or “excellent.” Nursing homes and assisted living centers fared less well, with 38 percent rating experiences as “fair” or “poor.”

Following up on questions in the first Empire Index: 

Originally published by the Empire Center for Public Policy in Albany, New York. Republished with permission.

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