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Medicaid is the most widely used health insurance program in the country. It’s a key source of health-care coverage for people with low incomes or disabilities, including millions of women and young adults across the country who rely on it for sexual and reproductive health care. In fact, Medicaid provides health care to more than 13 million women of reproductive age (ages 19 to 49), according to the National Partnership for Women & Families. For these women — including roughly 2.6 million Black women, 3.6 million Latinas, and 643,000 million Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander women — the program is about more than just access to medical care. It’s a lifeline. Women represent the majority of Medicaid enrollees.
In late February, House Republicans in Congress passed a budget resolution (which directs different committees to come up with specific budget plans) that would require the House Energy and Commerce Committee to cut spending on programs under its purview by at least $880 billion over the next decade. Experts have warned that the only way to meet this reduction goal would be to make drastic and destructive cuts to Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which helps fill in Medicaid gaps for kids up to age 19 as well as some pregnant women. Slashing the programs’ funding would undoubtedly hurt millions of Medicaid enrollees.
One of the most critical aspects of Medicaid is providing access to comprehensive and affordable contraception and family planning services. Under federal law, state Medicaid programs are required to provide coverage for family planning services with no cost-sharing (copayments, coinsurance, or deductibles). States have discretion in what family planning benefits they offer through the program, but most provide coverage for a range of services such as prescription contraceptives, health education and promotion, testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and pre-conception services, screenings, and examinations.
Since the 1980s, Medicaid has also been the primary source for publicly funded family planning care, particularly in states that have expanded their Medicaid eligibility for family planning under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). As of 2015, Medicaid covered 75% of all public funds spent on family planning services, according to the Guttmacher Institute, the reproductive health research and policy organization. Medicaid is one of the major public programs that makes birth control affordable and accessible for millions of low-income women.
The program is also a vital source of prenatal and postpartum care and is the largest payer of maternity care across the country, per the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The most recently available data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that Medicaid pays for nearly half (about 41%) of all births in the United States, and the percentage of births covered by Medicaid is even higher for Black women (roughly 64%) and Hispanic women (almost 59%).