How Publicly-Funded Family Planning Providers are Adapting in the COVID-19 Pandemic

Family planning providers, including community health centers, free-standing women’s health centers, health departments, and Planned Parenthood clinics are significant sources of care for contraceptive and STI services for low-income and uninsured individuals. Medicaid, the Title X Family Planning Program, and Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act (PHSA) provide support to more than 10,000 safety-net clinics across the country that provide reproductive health services to low-income women, men, and teens. These safety-net clinics have had to find ways to continue providing quality family planning services while also following the social distancing rules during the coronavirus pandemic. Some of the common changes reported by clinics and recommended by organizations (e.g., CDC, NFPRHA, FPNTC, ASCCP, UCSF’s Beyond the Pill, and the Reproductive Health Access Project) during this time apply throughout the delivery system, while others are specific to family planning care.

Some of these changes may be temporary, but some, such as greater use of telemedicine, which can give patients more autonomy in their reproductive health care, may endure longer-term. Over time, we will gain a better understanding of the scope and scale of these changes as well as their impact on access and quality. Provider finances and the type of regulations the states adopt after the emergency eases will also have implications on how and whether clinics will continue to offer services like telemedicine care after the pandemic emergency subsides. In the recent past, some family planning providers have faced a unique set of funding challenges. The network of providers receiving federal Title X funds shrunk considerably in the past year, with 26% of clinics leaving the network, including all Planned Parenthood clinics. These departures were triggered by major changes to the program, issued by the Trump Administration in Spring 2019, that prohibited Title X -funded clinics from making abortion referrals and required complete physical separation of abortion services. Six states (WA, OR, UT, ME, VT, HI) no longer have any Title X-funded clinics. While many states were able to offset the loss with state funds, the looming fiscal crisis puts the continued availability of these dollars in question.

Now, during the pandemic emergency, many clinics are experiencing lower patient volume and staffing shortages. Rising unemployment means that safety-net clinics may see an increase in patients in the near future as people lose employer-sponsored insurance. This will likely be a combination of uninsured patients without a source of payment as well as some with Medicaid coverage, particularly in expansion states, which could bring in additional revenue. In non-expansion states, Medicaid family planning programs could provide another revenue source for clinics by extending coverage for family planning services to individuals who do not qualify for full scope Medicaid coverage. While some providers will obtain short-term assistance from the recently enacted COVID-19 relief laws, this support will likely not be sufficient to meet long-term financial needs. For millions of low-income people, their need for timely sexual and reproductive health will continue, but the extent to which many of the providers that have been serving them will have access to resources they need to keep their doors open is not clear.

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