Here are three things to know about the tool.
1. Data includes breakouts by party identification, age, gender, race/ethnicity, income and insurance status, and the tool allows users to track opinions for a specific time period. For instance, the poll shows 73 percent of Republicans had an unfavorable view of the health law in the August 2013.
2. The custom-made comparative trend charts can be shared via email and social media, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. They may also be embedded in blogs or other websites, or downloaded as a data file.
3. Each Kaiser Health Tracking Poll is based on a nationally representative random telephone sample of between 1,200 and 1,500 adults, with interviews conducted in English and Spanish, and by landline and cell phone. More than 50 polls have been conducted since April 2010 involving more than 70,000 interviews.
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