The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Texas effort on women’s health stumbles

Group pushes option to Planned Parenthood.

- By Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, TEXAS — In pushing a replacemen­t for the Affordable Care Act that cuts off funds for Planned Parenthood, Republican­s are out to reassure women who rely on the major health care organizati­on that other clinics will step up to provide their low-cost breast exams, contracept­ion and cancer screenings.

Texas is already trying to prove it. But one big bet is quietly sputtering, and in danger of teaching the opposite lesson.

Last summer, Texas gave $1.6 million to an anti-abortion organizati­on called the Heidi Group to help strengthen small clinics that specialize in women’s health, like Planned Parenthood, but that don’t offer abortions. The goal was to help the clinics boost their patient rolls and show there would be no gap in services if the nation’s largest abortion provider had to scale back.

The effort offered a model other conservati­ve states could follow if Republican­s make their long-sought dream of defunding Planned Parenthood a reality under President Donald Trump. Several states are already moving to curtail the organizati­on’s funds.

But eight months later, the Heidi Group has little to show for its work. The nonprofit has done little of the outreach it promised, such as helping clinics promote their services on Facebook, or airing public service announceme­nts. It hasn’t made good on plans to establish a 1-800 number to help women find providers or ensure that all clinics have updated websites.

Neither the group nor state officials would say how many patients have been served so far by the clinics.

The Heidi Group is led by Carol Everett, a prominent anti-abortion activist and influentia­l conservati­ve force in the Texas Legislatur­e.

In a brief interview, Everett said some of the community clinics aren’t cooperatin­g despite her best efforts to attract more clients.

“We worked on one Facebook site for three months and they didn’t want to do it. And we worked on websites and they didn’t want to do it,” Everett said. “We can’t force them. We’re not forcing them.”

Everett said that advertisin­g she planned was stalled by delays in a separate $5.1 million family planning contract.

She proposed helping two dozen selected clinics serve 50,000 women overall in a year, more than such small facilities would normally handle. Clinic officials contacted by a reporter either did not return phone calls or would not speak on the record.

The Texas Health and Human Services Commission, which awarded the funding to the Heidi Group, acknowledg­ed the problems. Spokeswoma­n Carrie Williams said in an email that the agency had to provide “quite a bit” of technical support for the effort and make many site visits. She disputed that the contract funding has been as slow as Everett alleged.

“The bottom line is that we are holding our contractor­s accountabl­e, and will do everything we can to help them make themselves successful,” she said.

In August, the state had lauded Everett’s pitch for taxpayer funds as “one of the most robust” received.

Planned Parenthood and its supporters say the failures show the risks of relying on unproven providers to serve low-income women, and that Republican­s’ assurances about adequate care are only political rhetoric.

“Every time they try to relaunch one of these women’s health programs, without some of the most trusted providers in women’s health, every single time they come up short,” said Sarah Wheat, a Planned Parenthood spokeswoma­n in Texas. “And they show their lack of understand­ing and respect for what women need.”

Last week, the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office estimated that 15 percent of low-income people in rural or underserve­d areas would lose access to care if Planned Parenthood loses funding. The analysis also projected several thousand more births in the Medicaid program in the next year.

The Heidi Group is an evangelica­l nonprofit that started in the 1990s and is best known for promoting alternativ­es to abortion. It operates with a relatively small budget, taking in about $186,000 in grants and donations in 2015, according to tax records, and had not been providing patient care.

State officials say the yearold women’s health program includes about 5,000 providers. Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers are banned from participat­ion.

Federal dollars comprise nearly half of the Planned Parenthood’s annual billion-dollar budget, and although government funds don’t pay for abortions, the organizati­on is reimbursed by Medicaid for non-abortion services that it says the vast majority of clients receive. Missouri is planning to reject federal funding just to keep some of it away from Planned Parenthood, and Iowa is also considerin­g giving up millions in federal Medicaid dollars to create a state-run family planning program that excludes abortion providers.

House Republican­s’ proposed replacemen­t for the former President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act would freeze funding to Planned Parenthood for one year. House Speaker Paul Ryan has suggested other clinics will pick up the slack.

“It ends funding to Planned Parenthood and sends money to community centers,” Ryan has said.

Democrats contend that other clinics are already overloaded and wouldn’t be able to meet increased demand.

After Texas state funding was cut off to abortion providers in 2011, 82 family planning clinics closed in the state, a third of which were Planned Parenthood affiliates. A state report later found that 30,000 fewer women were served through a Texas women’s health program after the changes. Planned Parenthood now has 35 clinics in Texas and served more than 126,000 individual patients last year, including those seeking abortions. The state has provided no estimates of the number of low-income women served by other clinics.

Asked whether the Heidi Group would meet the patient targets in her contract, Everett said her own goal was to serve 70,000 women.

However, “it’s not as easy as it looks because we are not Planned Parenthood. We are working with private physicians and providers,” Everett said after leaving a committee hearing last week at the Texas Capitol.

She said the clinics she is working with are busy seeing 40 to 50 women a day.

“They don’t have time to go out and do some of the things that we would really like to help them do,” she said. “But we’re there if they want to. And we’re there when they need it. And we’re in their offices and we’re helping them.”

 ?? ERIC GAY / AP ?? A Life Choice clinic in San Antonio is among roughly two dozen women’s health providers in Texas working with the Heidi Group to provide similar services offered by Planned Parenthood, such as cancer screenings or treatments for sexually transmitte­d...
ERIC GAY / AP A Life Choice clinic in San Antonio is among roughly two dozen women’s health providers in Texas working with the Heidi Group to provide similar services offered by Planned Parenthood, such as cancer screenings or treatments for sexually transmitte­d...

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