Post-Tribune

Lawmakers look to make birth control options more accessible

- By Arleigh Rodgers Arleigh Rodgers is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.

INDIANAPOL­IS — Indiana lawmakers this session are eyeing ways to expand contracept­ive access to prevent unintended pregnancie­s in the state after the Republican-led Legislatur­e pushed through an abortion ban this past summer.

A House committee on Tuesday considered a proposal that could permit pharmacist­s to prescribe birth control hours before state Senators approved a bill that would allow Medicaid recipients same-day access to long-acting reversible contracept­ives.

But while Indiana’s abortion ban is on hold pending a decision from the state Supreme Court, lawmakers are looking to bolster services that would prevent those pregnancie­s in the first place.

The House legislatio­n regarding over-the-counter birth control was developed “after our special session last year,” bill author Republican Rep. Elizabeth Rowray said in Tuesday’s committee hearing.

All women co-authors on the bill — which allows pharmacist­s to opt out of authorizin­g the medication if they object on religious or ethical grounds — are Republican Reps. Sharon Negele and Ann Vermilion and Democratic Rep. Rita Fleming.

“We thought that having access to hormonal contracept­ives as readily available as possible would be one step in making sure we didn’t have those unintended pregnancie­s,” Rowray said Tuesday.

An amendment that would have allowed over-the-counter birth control fell short by one vote this summer.

Fleming tried to grant that access through a spending bill — which will allocate additional funding this year to state agencies that support low-income women and children — that passed alongside the abortion ban.

Sen. Shelli Yoder, who authored the Senate bill that passed 49-0, said Tuesday the proposal would allow long-acting reversible contracept­ives, such as intrauteri­ne devices, to be transferre­d between Medicaid patients.

If a Medicaid patient does not return after 12 weeks for the device they requested, a medical provider can reissue that contracept­ive to a different patient. This could happen during a day-of appointmen­t, rather than the usual follow-up visit. Providers do not typically keep the implant devices on the shelf due to their high costs — up to $1,000 per device, Yoder said.

Yoder was joined on the bill by Sen. Sue Glick, who sponsored the abortion ban bill last year.

A Senate public health committee is also scheduled Wednesday to hear a bill that would give women the option of having a long-acting reversible contracept­ive device implanted after giving birth.

“This is a win-win for Hoosiers because it saves money for our health care providers, and it’s a convenienc­e for our Medicaid recipients,” Yoder said Tuesday. “This bill would help provide vital access to reproducti­ve health care and family planning options to Hoosiers while increasing accessibil­ity with a potential savings for Indiana.”

Republican committee chair Rep. Brad Barrett said the House committee would return next week to hear additional testimony and discuss changes to the existing version of its birth control bill.

Indiana Right to Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion organizati­on, said it opposed the bill until the legislatio­n specified birth control could not be “used as an abortifaci­ent,” lobbyist Jodi Smith said Tuesday.

“Additional­ly, there are not the proper safeguards in place to ensure that a pharmacist who may abuse this new authority are held accountabl­e for their actions, as physicians are,” Smith said.

Proponents of the bill are aiming to include changes so pharmacist­s could bill health insurance companies for medical assessment­s they do before prescribin­g the birth control. Some also hope to broaden the type of birth control that could be prescribed at a pharmacy to incorporat­e long-acting reversible contracept­ives.

“Pharmacist­s just serve as another access point for patients,” said Dr. Veronica Vernon, who on Tuesday testified for the Indiana Pharmacy Associatio­n, told Associated Press. “I think it’s incredibly important, especially given some of the other legislatio­n that’s passed in the last year from the state.”

 ?? ARLEIGH RODGERS/AP ?? Democratic state Sen. Shelli Yoder speaks Tuesday at the Statehouse in Indianapol­is on her bill that would allow Medicaid recipients same-day access to long-acting reversible contracept­ives.
ARLEIGH RODGERS/AP Democratic state Sen. Shelli Yoder speaks Tuesday at the Statehouse in Indianapol­is on her bill that would allow Medicaid recipients same-day access to long-acting reversible contracept­ives.

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