Claims Drop After Texas Takes Over Women’s Health Program

This story was produced in partnership with

To stop Planned Parenthood clinics from receiving public financing, Texas鈥 Republican leaders gambled that the state could operate a contraception and cancer-screening program for low-income women without tens of millions of federal dollars.

But with the exclusion of roughly 40 Planned Parenthood clinics, none of which performed abortions, from the program in 2013, records show claims for birth control and wellness exams dropped, as did enrollment numbers.

State health officials relaunched the Medicaid Women鈥檚 Health Program as the Texas Woman鈥檚 Health Program in January after the federal government discontinued its $9-to-$1 match for the program 鈥 a decision the Obama administration made when state lawmakers began enforcing rules they said excluded clinics even loosely affiliated with abortion providers from receiving taxpayer dollars. (By law, none of the providers in the program performed abortions.)

The new state-financed program got off to a rocky start. In some parts of Texas, the state鈥檚 health agency struggled to find providers to replace Planned Parenthood clinics, which provided 40 percent of Women鈥檚 Health Program services in 2012.

鈥淭here can still be some pockets where we don鈥檛 have a provider and we did before,鈥 Texas Health and Human Services Commissioner Kyle Janek said. “Planned Parenthood may have been the only game in that area.鈥

During the first six months of 2013, there were 38 percent fewer reimbursement claims for birth control than there were during the first six months of 2012, according to a Texas Tribune analysis of data provided by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. The number of wellness exams, meanwhile, decreased by 23 percent. Program enrollment figures have also declined, down from 127,000 in January 2012 to 110,900 in May, the most recent month available.

Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and daughter of the late Texas Gov. Ann Richards, called the figures 鈥渢roubling.鈥

鈥淒espite all the promises from state officials that women鈥檚 health care needs would be met,鈥 she said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 clear they aren鈥檛.鈥

But Janek argued that the claims numbers are misleading. He said the birth control distributed by the program has not declined as much as initial claims data suggest, because the majority of providers who replaced Planned Parenthood clinics are physician groups that direct patients to pharmacies for prescriptions, rather than distributing it onsite like family planning clinics. The program鈥檚 pharmacy data for 2013 is not complete, and the state could not provide additional information on how many birth control prescriptions were filled.

鈥淲e think when you add all those up for birth control, both those delivered at the pharmacy and those given by the provider鈥檚 office, we鈥檝e got an increase, not a decrease,鈥 Janek said.

Women鈥檚 Health Program claims for long-acting, reversible birth control methods like intra-uterine devices and hormonal implants, which must be inserted by the provider onsite, declined by 17 percent in the same time period. Janek said that was the result of the state not paying providers enough to cover the procedure, something health officials have rectified by raising reimbursement rates for copper IUDs by $200 and hormonal implants by $75.

鈥淲e鈥檝e changed that, so I expect the second six months and thereafter will tell a different story,鈥 he said.

Janek said that while he is happy with the state-run program鈥檚 progress, he would not be satisfied 鈥渦ntil we do better.鈥 The state is conducting targeted outreach to encourage more women to enroll in the program; health officials say when they sent mailers in October and November to women whose families were registered for other state programs, enrollment promptly increased by more than 9,000 women.

While Republican state leaders work to improve capacity in the state-run program, many family planning clinics have struggled. Seventy-six family planning clinics closed after the 2011 legislative session, when Republican lawmakers with Planned Parenthood in their crosshairs cut two-thirds of the state鈥檚 family planning budget, set up a tiered system to shift remaining dollars away from reproductive health clinics and ousted Planned Parenthood and other clinics from the Women鈥檚 Health Program.

Haven Health Clinic in Amarillo, for example, the only family planning clinic that serves the 26 counties in the Texas Panhandle, saw a 20 percent decrease in Women鈥檚 Health Program patients between 2012 and 2013.

鈥淲e鈥檙e struggling now, but we鈥檇 be out of business if the program closed completely, which would be devastating for this part of the state,鈥 said Carolina Cogdill, Haven鈥檚 chief executive officer.

Republican lawmakers attempted to mitigate the damage they had done to Texas鈥 family planning infrastructure in the 2013 legislative session by passing the largest financial package for women鈥檚 health in state history. Texas鈥 2014-15 budget includes $71 million to operate the Texas Women鈥檚 Health Program, $100 million to expand a primary care program to serve an additional 170,000 women, and $43 million to replace family planning grants the federal government used to award to the state health agency 鈥 but has now given to another organization.

But women鈥檚 health advocates remain concerned that the damage wrought in 2011 cannot easily be undone.

鈥淭he Texas Women鈥檚 Health Program has great potential, but it has not taken off in private practice yet,鈥 said Dr. Janet Realini, chair of the Texas Women鈥檚 Healthcare Coalition, which represents 39 medical trade associations and advocacy groups. 鈥淭he providers who were doing most of that work have been either excluded or damaged by the cuts.鈥

Although some providers say a decline in Women鈥檚 Health Program patients has put them in financial distress, others have easily absorbed new patients who previously received services from Planned Parenthood.

Parkland Health and Hospital System in the Dallas area received 212 phone calls in January from former Planned Parenthood patients looking for a new Women鈥檚 Health Program provider, said Paula Turicchi, Parkland鈥檚 senior vice president for women and infants specialty health. So far in 2013, Parkland clinics have served 9,180 patients in the program, compared with 8,655 in 2012.

鈥淲e definitely saw a greater impact around those locations where Planned Parenthood had been a provider,鈥 Turicchi said.

After the 2011 budget cuts, Parkland鈥檚 annual family planning financing dropped to $2.1 million from $7.4 million, and it instituted a $25 co-payment for low-income family planning patients who used to be fully subsidized. Turicchi said 42 of 420 patients who canceled appointments in February 2012 because they couldn鈥檛 afford the co-payment later returned pregnant.

Parkland recently received $4.8 million through the state鈥檚 newly expanded primary health care program to increase services for impoverished women in 2014.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 going to go a long way in providing even more health care services to patients,鈥 Turicchi said, adding that the program covers far more than just family planning.

More from 麻豆女优 Health News