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The impact of state Medicaid coverage of abortion on people accessing care in three states.

Authors :
Heil, Susan K. R.
Caglayan, Koray
Castillo, Graciela
Valenzuela‐Mendez, Cristian
Lankford, Coretta Mallery
Sgro, Gina
Yang, Manxi
Downing, Lori
Bhalla, Meera
Davis, Stephanie McNally
Source :
Perspectives on Sexual & Reproductive Health. Sep2024, Vol. 56 Issue 3, p255-268. 14p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Context: Medicaid is a major funder of reproductive health services, including family planning and pregnancy‐related care, especially for people with limited income and people of color. Federal Medicaid funds cannot be used for abortion however 16 states allow state Medicaid funds to pay for abortion. In recent years, Illinois and Maine implemented, and West Virginia discontinued, state Medicaid coverage of abortion. Methodology: With retrospective procedure‐ and patient‐level data obtained from clinics in these three states, we used an interrupted time series design, multivariable regression models, and descriptive statistics to assess changes in procedure volume and patients' share of total procedure price (patient price). Results: In Maine and Illinois, implementing state Medicaid coverage of abortion contributed to an immediate overall increase in abortion access (as seen by a rise in monthly procedure volume at the time of the policy's implementation), a decrease in patient price (by 36% in Maine and 44% in Illinois) after policy implementation as compared to pre‐implementation, and overall improved access among people of color. Conversely, when West Virginia discontinued coverage, access to care decreased, patient price increased by 130%, and the share of abortion procedures among people of color decreased. Conclusions: In the fragmented abortion access landscape of the post‐Roe era, our study provides new evidence that financial assistance offered through state Medicaid policies that cover abortion may be most helpful to those facing traditional structural inequities to access, while discontinuation of Medicaid coverage of abortion further burdens those already economically marginalized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15386341
Volume :
56
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Perspectives on Sexual & Reproductive Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181226185
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/psrh.12275