Tackling cost of maternity care
"This bill removes barriers from the continuum of pregnancy-related medical care, ensuring that all medical care related to pregnancy be provided free of all deductibles, copays and cost sharing," said Sen.
The bill, as it is written, does not dictate what is or is not covered by insurance policies; it just states that there be no cost-sharing of any kind for the services. It would include all private, fully-funded insurance plans and insurance provided through the state for state and municipal employees. It is already a benefit for residents insured through MassHealth.
During the last legislative session, state lawmakers made sure that abortion and abortion care services were fully covered by health insurers and abolished the practice of meeting deductibles, charging copays or otherwise requesting patients foot part of the bill.
That law was a reaction to the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the
Does the bill change
what's covered?
"In the last session, with the repeal of Roe, the
"I'm proud to co-sponsor this bill, which puts the health of pregnant people first," said Sen.
Supporters said financial considerations prompt many
"More than 1.7 million
Those high-deductible thresholds and copays serve to discourage pregnant people from seeking necessary pregnancy-related medical care, or any medical care, Friedman said, adding that the lack of services could have serious health consequences for the mothers and their children.
In her testimony, the senator quoted a
Concerns from
However, the
The organization anticipates increased premiums for covered individuals in the state. Without the ability to share costs with patients, Pellegrini predicted a
"If cost-sharing is eliminated for one service, the actuarial value of the insurance product changes, increasing the overall premium," Pellegrini said in a prepared statement. She said members work "diligently" to keep premiums and cost-sharing as low as possible.
"In the case of pregnancy and childbirth, health plans provide coverage for routine prenatal care including office visits without cost-sharing, as well as preventive services as outlined in federal guidance including no-cost depression and anxiety screenings and interventions, gestational diabetes screenings and healthy weight counseling, screenings for hypertension and sexually transmitted infections, and breastfeeding interventions for postpartum women," Pellegrini said.
Barriers to accessing health
care for low-income households
Statistically, lower-income households pay more of their total incomes for health care costs, including insurance premiums, than higher-income households, according to
A
Cost-sharing demands, coupled with a low income, can be a prohibitive obstacle to accessing pregnancy care.
"Women should not face the choice of going into debt for basic reproductive services or putting food on the table," said
"Lower income women are least able to afford the extra costs," Soma said, adding that, on average,
Costs soar with complications;
as visits increase, so do co-pays
One woman,
Weekly visits for scans were the norm, each requiring a co-pay and out-of-pocket costs that were random, inconsistent and "always high." Changes in insurance, including a renewal, meant that she failed to meet her deductible while she was pregnant and then had the deductible reapplied on the policy renewal.
"It was the same pregnancy," Ford said.
Throughout her pregnancy, Ford said, rather than focus on her condition and the coming leap into parenthood, she fretted about whether costs incurred were covered by insurance.
"It took us three years to pay off the cost of maternity care," Ford said. "Families should not have to risk bankruptcy to have a child."



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