Medicaid and Family Planning: Background and Implications of the ACA

Introduction

Medicaid plays a primary role financing health care services and facilitating access to a broad a range of sexual and reproductive health services for millions of low-income women of childbearing age.  Today it is the single largest source of public funding for family planning services, far exceeding the funding levels of the Federal Title X family planning program.1  States have long-been required to include family planning services in their Medicaid programs, but the shifts in health care delivery and reforms brought on by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) are changing how these services are provided. While the ACA offers an opportunity to expand access to family planning services, it has challenged many family planning providers serving low-income populations to participate in changing systems of care in new ways. This brief reviews the role of Medicaid in financing and enabling access to family planning services for low-income women; discusses how states have expanded access to these services with Medicaid; and highlights future programmatic challenges in the context of the health care delivery and coverage reforms resulting from the ACA.

Medicaid and Women

Women make up a sizeable share of Medicaid enrollment.  This is due to eligibility requirements that have roots in the welfare program formerly known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and efforts to expand insurance coverage to low-income pregnant women dating back to the 1980’s.  In 2011, the most recent year for which there is national enrollment data, but prior to the 2014 ACA Medicaid coverage expansions, women and girls 15 and older represented a third of all Medicaid beneficiaries compared to a fifth for men (Figure 1).2

Figure 1: Composition of Medicaid Population, by Sex and Age, 2011

Figure 1: Composition of Medicaid Population, by Sex and Age, 2011

Among the 19.4 million women ages 15 and older with full Medicaid benefits in 2011, those in their reproductive years (ages 15 to 49) accounted for 70% of enrollment nationwide.3  For these 13.5 million women, Medicaid played a crucial role in coverage for family planning services and pregnancy-related care.   The proportion of women enrolled in Medicaid who are reproductive age varies by state, ranging from 61% in New Jersey to a high of 80% in Delaware.  These variations reflect differences in median income as well as state-defined program eligibility criteria, including for pregnancy-related care (Appendix 1).

Medicaid Family Planning Policy

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