Austin American-Statesman

Postpartum Medicaid got boost under Biden

- Marta Campabadal Graus PolitiFact.com

During an interview with Noticias Univision, Vice President Kamala Harris touted the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to extend postpartum Medicaid care.

“When I came in as vice president, only three states extended postpartum care Medicaid coverage to 12 months. I issued a call and a challenge to all states. And now 43 states have extended postpartum care for women,” she said Jan. 29.

Postpartum health insurance covers a critical period for recovering from childbirth, which the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says includes addressing complicati­ons of delivery, ensuring mental health, managing infant care and transition­ing from obstetric to primary care.

Federal law previously required states to provide pregnancy-related Medicaid coverage until 60 days postpartum. Then 2021 legislatio­n temporaril­y gave states the option to extend that coverage to a full calendar year. Legislatio­n in 2022 gave states the option to make the extension permanent.

States offer this coverage using federal funding and the state’s own money.

Health experts told PolitiFact that Harris’ claim — on the numbers she cited and the administra­tion’s role — is correct.

When contacted for comment, Harris’ office sent PolitiFact two sources to support the vice president’s claim.

The first was a Medicaid Postpartum Coverage Extension Tracker from KFF, a health policy research and analysis organizati­on. It shows that

43 states have extended Medicaid coverage to 12 months postpartum.

Harris’ office also shared U.S. Department of Health and Human Services informatio­n showing that when President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, Illinois, New Jersey and Virginia were the only states in which Medicaid subsidized 12 months of postpartum coverage.

Different laws that Biden signed gave states an easier pathway and some federal money for this expansion. States still partially fund the care, as they did before the expansion.

The 2021 American Rescue Plan, which Biden signed into law, enabled states to temporaril­y extend Medicaid coverage to 12 months postpartum. The extension began April 1, 2022, and ended last May.

KFF reported that before April 2022, states that wanted to use federal money to expand postpartum care had to do so through a Section 1115 waiver. The waiver lets states divert money from what’s required by federal statutes and try new approaches for administer­ing Medicaid. But the waivers allowed for only temporary changes. States could also use only state money to expand postpartum programs, rather than go through the waiver process.

“What the Biden administra­tion did was create a new, arguably easier, pathway through a state plan amendment,” said Maria W. Steenland, a Brown University assistant professor of population studies. Under these plan amendments, facilitate­d by the American Rescue Plan, the federal government and states agree on how to administer the Medicaid program.

Later, the 2022 Consolidat­ed Appropriat­ions Act, which Biden signed into law in 2023, gave states the option to permanentl­y extend postpartum coverage to 12 months.

States that choose to make this coverage permanent cover those costs using federal and state money.

“The postpartum extensions are jointly funded with federal and state funds, just as all pregnancy-related coverage is under Medicaid,” said Usha Ranji, KFF associate director of women’s health policy. Ranji added that the 2021 and 2022 laws did not change the financing arrangemen­t for pregnancy-related coverage.

A 2020 study on the impact of extending postpartum Medicaid found that although many states were interested in extending postpartum care, some had not because doing so required getting the temporary Section 1115 waiver or using state money.

Experts said that because the postpartum care expansion is still relatively new, it’s not possible yet to measure whether it has reduced postpartum hospitaliz­ations and improved maternal mortality rates.

Steenland co-authored a study that found a 17% reduction in hospitaliz­ations during the first 60 days postpartum was associated with the Medicaid expansions. The study also found evidence of a smaller decrease in hospitaliz­ations from 61 days to six months postpartum.

PolitiFact’s ruling

Harris said postpartum Medicaid coverage expanded from three states to 43 because of the Biden administra­tion.

In 2021, when the Biden administra­tion took office, Illinois, New Jersey and Virginia were the only states that had 12 months of postpartum Medicaid coverage. Now, 43 states have it.

Biden signed a 2021 law that allowed states to temporaril­y expand Medicaid postpartum coverage until May 2023, using a combinatio­n of federal and state money. A law Biden signed in 2023 enabled states to make the expansion permanent.

We rate this claim True.

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