In Texas, Medicaid coverage ends soon after childbirth. Will lawmakers allow more time?
"It was a time of a lot of learning, turnaround, and pivoting for me, because we weren't necessarily expecting that kind of life change," she said.
"Sometimes the representative that I would speak to wouldn't know the answer," she said. "I would have to wait for a follow-up and hope that they actually did follow up with me. More than 476,000 pregnant Texans are currently navigating that fragmented, bureaucratic system to find care. Medicaid provides coverage for about half of all births in the state — but many people lose eligibility not long after giving birth.
Many pregnant people rely on Medicaid coverage to get access to anything from prenatal appointments to prenatal vitamins, and then postpartum follow-up. Pregnancy-related Medicaid in
They support a bill moving through the
Pregnancy Medicaid helps fill the gap, temporarily. Of the nearly half a million Texans currently enrolled in the program, the majority are Hispanic women ages 19-29.
Texans living in the state without legal permission and lawfully present immigrants are not eligible, though they can get different coverage that ends immediately when a pregnancy does. In states where the Medicaid expansion has been adopted, coverage is available to all adults with incomes below 138% of the federal poverty level. For a family of three, that means an income of about
In
For
Later she learned that Medicaid would pay for her to give birth at an enrolled birthing center.
"I went to Lovers Lane Birth Center in
In the 2021 legislative session, Republican Gov.
Last August,
The state's
"People are either having to wait until their condition gets worse, they forgo care, or they may have to pay out-of-pocket," White said. "There are people who are dying following their pregnancy for reasons that are related to having been pregnant, and almost all of them are preventable."
In
Chronic disease accounted for almost 20% of pregnancy-related deaths in
"This is one of the more extreme consequences of the lack of health care," White said.
Black Texans, who make up close to 20% of pregnancy Medicaid recipients, are also more than twice as likely to die from a pregnancy-related cause than their white counterparts, a statistic that has held true for close to 10 years with little change, according to the MMMRC report.
Stark disparities such as that can be traced to systemic issues, including the lack of diversity in medical providers; socioeconomic barriers for Black women such as cost, transportation, lack of child care and poor communication with providers; and shortcomings in medical education and providers' implicit biases — which can "impact clinicians' ability to listen to Black people's experiences and treat them as equal partners in decision-making about their own care and treatment options," according to a recent survey.
"It's the chance to have access to health care to address issues that maybe have been building for a while, those kinds of things that left unaddressed build into something that would need surgery or more intensive intervention later on," she said. "It just feels like that should be something that's accessible to everyone when they need it."
Extending health coverage for pregnant people, she said, is "the difference between having a chance at a healthy pregnancy versus not."
As of February, 30 states have adopted a 12-month postpartum coverage extension so far, according to a KFF report, with eight states planning to implement an extension.
"We're behind," Forester said of
Many versions of bills that would extend pregnancy Medicaid coverage to 12 months have been filed in the legislature this year, including House Bill 12 and Senate Bill 73. Forester said she feels "cautiously optimistic."
"I think there's still going to be a few little legislative issues or land mines that we have to navigate," she said. "But I feel like the momentum is there."
"Giving birth was the hardest experience that my body has physically ever been through," she said. "It was a really profound moment in my health history — just knowing that I was able to make it through that time, and that it could even be enjoyable — and so special, obviously, because look what the world has for it."
She just wishes people, especially people of color giving birth, could get the health support they need during a vulnerable time.
"If I was able to talk to people in the legislature about extending Medicaid coverage, I would say to do that," she said. "It's an investment in the people who are raising our future and completely worth it."
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(This story is part of a partnership that includes KERA,



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