We examine the impact of recent state-level Medicaid policy changes that expanded eligibility for family planning services to higher-income women and to Medicaid clients whose benefits would expire otherwise. We show that the income-based policy change reduced overall births to non-teens by about 2% and to teens by over 4%; estimates suggest a decline of 9% among newly eligible women. The reduction in fertility appears to have been accomplished via greater use of contraception. Our calculations indicate that allowing higher-income women to receive federally funded family planning cost on the order of $6,800 for each averted birth
Infertility currently affects over 6 million individuals in the United States. While most health ins...
Laws that mandate contraceptive coverage by private health insurance plans are common at the state l...
Contraception, otherwise known as birth control, is when individuals use a single contraceptive meth...
Abstract Introduction Medicaid family planning expansion programs have been shown to improve reprodu...
CONTEXT: Pregnant women and children's eligibility for Medicaid was expanded dramatically durin...
Beginning in the mid 1980s and extending through the early to mid 1990s, a substantial number of wom...
Health insurance reform in Massachusetts lowered the financial cost of both pregnancy (by increased ...
This paper considers whether state Medicaid abortion funding restrictions affect the likelihood of g...
The Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate has been one of the most hotly debated segments of t...
There are wide class gaps in unintended childbearing among single women in the United States, result...
The theoretical and empirical links between public health insurance access and fertility in the Unit...
Background: There are a variety of public health and social welfare motivations to reduce unintended...
The number of unintended pregnancies in the U.S. has been rising since the legalization of abortion...
AbstractBackgroundAs part of the Affordable Care Act, a federal requirement for private health plans...
Background: Contraception access is strongly connected to women’s greater educational and profession...
Infertility currently affects over 6 million individuals in the United States. While most health ins...
Laws that mandate contraceptive coverage by private health insurance plans are common at the state l...
Contraception, otherwise known as birth control, is when individuals use a single contraceptive meth...
Abstract Introduction Medicaid family planning expansion programs have been shown to improve reprodu...
CONTEXT: Pregnant women and children's eligibility for Medicaid was expanded dramatically durin...
Beginning in the mid 1980s and extending through the early to mid 1990s, a substantial number of wom...
Health insurance reform in Massachusetts lowered the financial cost of both pregnancy (by increased ...
This paper considers whether state Medicaid abortion funding restrictions affect the likelihood of g...
The Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate has been one of the most hotly debated segments of t...
There are wide class gaps in unintended childbearing among single women in the United States, result...
The theoretical and empirical links between public health insurance access and fertility in the Unit...
Background: There are a variety of public health and social welfare motivations to reduce unintended...
The number of unintended pregnancies in the U.S. has been rising since the legalization of abortion...
AbstractBackgroundAs part of the Affordable Care Act, a federal requirement for private health plans...
Background: Contraception access is strongly connected to women’s greater educational and profession...
Infertility currently affects over 6 million individuals in the United States. While most health ins...
Laws that mandate contraceptive coverage by private health insurance plans are common at the state l...
Contraception, otherwise known as birth control, is when individuals use a single contraceptive meth...