Gov. Terry Branstad (R-IA)
(Credit: AP/Charlie Neibergall)
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R) has approved a measure to expand his
state’s Medicaid program under Obamacare, which will extend health coverage to
tens of thousands of his poor residents. But there’s a catch buried in the Medicaid
expansion legislationthat the governor signed last week. Now, when
low-income women on Medicaid seek insurance coverage for medically-necessary
abortions, they’ll have to get approval from Branstad
himself.
State-level Medicaid
programs often exclude abortion from the health services they will cover for
low-income beneficiaries. Just like the Hyde Amendment prevents federal money from directly funding abortion care, over
35 states have decided they don’t want state dollars to pay for abortion,
either. Just 17 states allow low-income women on Medicaid to receive insurance
coverage for most abortion services — the others, like Iowa, will only permit
those women to be reimbursed for the cost of their abortion in cases of rape,
incest, and life endangerment.
But now Iowa is going a
step further. If a woman who gets her health care through Medicaid has an
abortion that falls under one of the exceptions in the state’s abortion
coverage ban — if she has been a victim of rape or incest, if
her fetus has fatal abnormalities that won’t allow it to survive outside the womb, or if her life will be put in danger unless she ends the pregnancy — she’ll need to have her case
approved by the governor’s office. Presumably, Branstad will choose whether to
approve or deny each woman’s request for insurance coverage for her abortion.
It’s the first law of its kind in any state.
“This bill — now law — is
outrageous on many different levels,” Ilyse Hogue, the president of NARAL
Pro-Choice America, said in a recent statement.
“Women in Iowa already face so many barriers in trying to get safe, legal
abortion care. Now their governor will be deciding personally on a case-by-case
basis, whether a woman’s doctor will be paid for providing a legal, medically
appropriate, and constitutionally guaranteed procedure.”
Under Iowa’s current
policy, a state agency already reviews claims for Medicaid funding of abortion
services to make sure the billing is adhering to the law and doesn’t fall
outside of the approved exceptions. As the Des Moines Register reports,
that process will likely continue under the new law. But there’s a notable
difference: “instead of the final call being rendered by the Medicaid medical
director, the democratically elected and politically accountable governor will
decide.”
Low-income women are
unlikely to be able to afford bills for abortion care, which can exceed $1,000
dollars. If the governor decides that Medicaid won’t cover the cost of an
abortion procedure, the medical providers will likely be forced to absorb the
cost.
Ultimately, denying
low-income women access to affordable abortion services simply exacerbates the economic divides that lead some desperate women to seek out illegal abortion
providers. By passing a mounting number of state laws that prevent
women from using their insurance coverage to pay for reproductive care — as
well as by forcing abortion clinics out of business and driving up the cost of
the abortion pill — lawmakers are essentially making abortion too expensive for low-income
women to access at all.
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