Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Texas set to restrict insurance coverage for abortion

No exceptions in cases of rape, incest

- By Will Weissert and David Crary

Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas — The Republican-controlled Texas Legislatur­e is poised to restrict insurance coverage for abortions over the objections of opponents who say doing so could force some women to make heartwrenc­hing choices because no exceptions will be made in cases of rape and incest.

A bill requiring women to purchase extra insurance to cover abortions except amid medical emergencie­s already cleared the state House after hours of emotional debate. The Texas Senate could approve it Saturday night, sending the restrictio­ns to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott to be signed into law.

State lawmakers debated other bills limiting insurance coverage for abortion during Texas’ regular legislativ­e session that ended in May, but Mr. Abbott called a special session and revived the issue.

Ten states already have laws restrictin­g insurance coverage of abortion in all private insurance plans: Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Utah. All make exceptions if the mother’s life is endangered; only Indiana and Utah also make exceptions for rape and incest.

The measure’s House sponsor, Republican Rep. John Smithee, said it applies only to “elective” abortions and promotes “economic freedom” by not forcing Texas policyhold­ers who object to abortion to “subsidize” insurance coverage for women undergoing the procedure.

“What we’re saying here is: If you want to buy this coverage, you can buy it,” said Mr. Smithee, a Republican from Amarillo.

Outnumbere­d Democrats dismissed the bill as purely political, arguing that insurance companies already cover only medically necessary abortions. They also said the law will require women to purchase insurance plans that insurers won’t actually offer because too few women will buy them, not knowing in advance that they will be undergoing abortions.

Rep. Chris Turner, head of the House Democratic Caucus, said the bill would effectivel­y require women to buy “rape insurance.”

“I think we all agree, rape, sexual assault, incest are horrible crimes,” said Mr. Turner, of the Dallas suburb of Grand Prairie. He added of victims who wouldn’t be eligible for abortion insurance coverage: “Let’s not revictimiz­e that same person again.”

Texas approved some of the nation’s strictest limits on abortion in 2013, but those were mostly struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court last summer. Still, abortion clinics around the state have closed and the number of abortions performed in the country’s second-largest state has fallen from more than 82,000 in 2006 to around 54,300 in 2015.

“One of the talking points we’ve heard lately is abortion should be considered health care,” Elizabeth Graham, director of Texas Right to Life, told a Texas Senate committee. “Really, the definition of health care is to make a person well and to encourage health. The definition of a successful abortion is the complete death of the unborn child.”

State policy analyst Elizabeth Nash of the Guttmacher Institute, a national research group that supports abortion rights, said she knows of no current analysis of the impact of states imposing coverage restrictio­ns, nor the extent to which health plans offer supplement­al coverage for abortion.

“My sense is that there isn’t any identifiab­le impact of these restrictio­ns since most women pay out of pocket already,” Ms. Nash said by email.

A Guttmacher analysis in March said about 60 percent of privately insured abortion patients pay out of pocket, because their policy doesn’t cover the procedure or because deductible­s are high. But many women who get abortions are too poor to afford private insurance.

Nancy Northup, president of the New York-based Center for Reproducti­ve Rights, depicted the insurance bans as “a shocking infringeme­nt” on women’s right to opt for private insurance to cover a legal medical procedure. In cases where a woman opts for an abortion after detection of a severe fetal abnormalit­y, the costs can run into the thousands of dollars, she said.

The insurance bans also have been criticized by the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, which says insurance coverage of abortion should be comparable to that of other essential health care services.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States