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Influence
Index

What if the people Americans trust most in healthcare are the ones they hear from least?

The inaugural SachsHEALTH Influence Index measures that disconnect, identifies where trust barriers exist, and shows how advocacy leaders can address them.


Volume 1

Inaugural Report

2,500

U.S. Adults

±2.0 PTS

Margin

A Trust Rearrangement,
Not a Trust Collapse.

Just 52% of Americans trust the U.S. healthcare system to act in patients’ best interests. But trust has not evaporated evenly. It has moved. Americans still trust their own doctor, nurse, pharmacist, and hospital. Local and state health departments outperform Washington.

And yet the voices Americans trust most are largely absent from the public conversation, while the ones they trust least are setting the terms.

This is the Influence Gap: the divide between who Americans believe shapes the public healthcare narrative today and who they think should.

Why do Americans trust their clinicians yet act against their advice?

The disconnect between who Americans believe has influence over the healthcare system and who they believe should have influence is not abstract, but tangibly changes behavior.

In the past year, 42% of Americans deliberately acted against their clinician's recommendations because of a lack of trust in the healthcare system.


This is active noncompliance, driven by a trust deficit that reaches beyond the exam room.

  • 17%Avoided or delayed a medical treatment
  • 16%Avoided or delayed a vaccine
  • 15%Skipped a medical test
  • 12%Changed a medication dose on their own
  • 11%Stopped taking a medication early

Who has power isn't who has trust.

No group has a wider gap between perceived influence and desired influence than clinicians.

Only 26% say doctors and nurses are among the most influential voices in healthcare today, but 58% say they should be. Insurers show the reverse: 51% perceived influence, but only 15% think they should have it. Americans want the people who care for them to speak louder. They want the industries that set prices to speak less.

The gap between who Americans trust and who actually shapes their healthcare is the defining tension in the system today.

Ryan Cohn · Partner & Chief Strategy Officer, Sachs Media

The Influence Gap

Perceived influence today vs. desired influence, by group.

Has Today
Should Have

Clinicians

Doctors · Nurses

26% 58%
+32PT

Patient Advocacy

Nonprofits

14% 41%
+27PT

Scientists

Researchers

18% 40%
+22PT

Hospitals

Health Systems

22% 33%
+11PT

Changing Minds on Health Policy.

Reaching the skeptical requires showing your work, and
the messenger matters.

Sources Most Likely to Change Someone's Mind About a Health Policy Proposal

Personal Doctor

or Clinician

50%

Independent

Research Org

32%

Nurse or

Clinician

22%

Friend or

Family Member

21%

Ready to go deeper?

Want the Full Picture For Your Sector?

Ryan Cohn, Dr. Karen Cyphers, and Byron Johnson will walk your leadership team through what these findings mean for your organization, filtered for your sector and audience.

Meet Our Experts

Briefings are led by the same strategists who designed the research and advise healthcare leaders on the communications implications every day.

ryan-formal-square

Ryan Cohn

Partner and Chief Strategy Officer

Karen_Cypher_Formal_sq

Dr. Karen Cyphers

Partner and Chief Research Officer

Byron_Johnson_Formal-crop

Byron Johnson

Vice President, Health

Executive Briefing

What Does This Mean For Your Organization?

National findings, sector-specific implications. SachsHEALTH offers complimentary executive briefings tailored to your organization’s competitive position and communications priorities.

  • 01

    Key survey findings filtered for your sector and audience.

  • 02

    How the trust-power gap specifically affects your type of organization.

  • 03

    Concrete insights and next steps for communications and positioning.

  • 04

    Live Q&A with our research and strategy leads.

  • 05

    Issue and controversy-specific findings on vaccine policy, environmental health, litigation environments, telehealth, and mental health.

Book Your Briefing

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

We’ll respond within two business days to schedule.

About This Report

Research-backed Strategy For a Fractured Moment.

The data gives you the question. A briefing gives you the answer.

SachsHEALTH is Sachs Media’s specialized division for healthcare and life sciences, with a 30-year track record of partnering with health industry leaders to drive change. We lead public affairs and strategic communications campaigns that combine health policy insight, original research, disciplined message development, and targeted stakeholder engagement. The full 2026 SachsHEALTH Influence Index report is available as a free download. Share it widely with your team.

Methodology

Sample Size

N = 2,500

Margin of Error

± 2.0 PTS

Scope

National

A national survey of 2,500 U.S. adults, fielded February 2026. The instrument included both traditional opinion questions and controlled experiments that tested messenger, framing, and policy authorization effects. Designed and analyzed by Karen Cyphers, Ph.D., Chief Research Officer of Sachs Media's Breakthrough Research division. Cross-tabulations by political ideology, age, race/ethnicity, gender, household income, insurance status, and region. Margin of error approximately ±2.0 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.