A new nationwide survey finds eight in 10 Americans would oppose a health care bill if it includes deep cuts to Medicaid and 71 percent oppose moving the program to a lump sum or per-capita payment structure when they find out that structure would prohibit states from responding to the real-time needs of their residents. The poll, commissioned by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network comes just after Senate leadership announced they would delay a vote on their health bill. The Senate bill would cut more than $800 billion in federal Medicaid funding and, according to the Congressional Budget Office, result in 15 million people currently enrolled in the program to lose their coverage next year. Medicaid provides a critical safety-net for more than 2.3 million American cancer patients and survivors, including one-third of all childhood cancer patients at the point of diagnosis.