Men are 10% more likely to have never neglected care compared to women.

While lawmakers remain engulfed in the hotly polarized politics of health reform, the soaring costs of health care in the United States have continued forcing the average family to choose between their personal and financial health, with a new Morning Consult/Business Insider survey finding 58 percent of adults have delayed or forgone medical or dental care because of prohibitively high costs and 31 percent of all respondents saying they did this “often.”

The poll, which surveyed 4,400 adults from March 13-17, also revealed disparities in health care spending patterns along income lines and age.

Per the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ annual report on health spending, household spending on health care reached $980 billion in 2017, for an average of $266 per person per month.

But that spending is not evenly distributed. In 2016, an analysis of the 2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey found 5 percent of the population accounted for 50 percent of all health spending. Fourteen percent of respondents in the Morning Consult/Business Insider poll report spending at or above roughly the CMS-calculated average, or more than $250 a month, on health care, while more than half spend less than $100, with significant variation across socioeconomic status and age.