USA TODAY US Edition

Bills aim to help pregnant women get flu, DTaP shots

- Shefali Luthra This story was published in partnershi­p with The 19th, a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy.

Despite the heightened risk of severe complicati­ons, pregnant people often don’t get flu shots or the DTaP vaccine, which protects against tetanus, diphtheria and whooping cough. People insured by Medicaid – which covers almost half of all births in the country – are far less likely to get those shots compared with those on private insurance.

Two new pieces of bipartisan legislatio­n are trying to address that by eliminatin­g the cost-barriers that often keep pregnant people from getting necessary vaccinatio­ns.

The two bills, shared first with The 19th, are jointly backed by Sens. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., and Bill Cassidy, R-La. The first would require Medicaid plans cover these vaccines during pregnancy without any out-of-pocket costs for patients, along with any other immunizati­ons recommende­d by the federal Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices. The second would require the federal government to issue guidance to states about how to improve vaccinatio­n rates, and institute data collection procedures to better track Medicaid’s rates of perinatal vaccinatio­ns.

“Far too many pregnant women and their babies become seriously ill and even die from preventabl­e illnesses. We must do more to ensure that they receive the health care that they need,” said Hassan.

Neither bill has any other sponsors. But both efforts would go a long way toward addressing shortfalls in pregnancy-related health. Right now, Medicaid benefits vary from state to state – not all cover flu shots and DTaP vaccines.

“This is super important and should have happened sooner,” said Dr. Lindsay Admon, an OB-GYN at the University of Michigan who researches pregnancy-related health care and outcomes.

Research shows that when people on Medicaid have to pay out-of-pocket for vaccines, they are far less likely to actually get those shots. That especially matters in pregnancy: Pregnant people who contract the flu are more likely to go to the hospital or die. The virus can affect fetuses, too, leading to neural tube defects and other adverse outcomes. Meanwhile, the DTaP vaccine is highly recommende­d for pregnant people to protect newborns from whooping cough, which can be particular­ly dangerous in infants.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that between 2016 and 2017, the most recent year with publicly available informatio­n, only 50% of pregnant women got flu shots. That same year, about 15% of pregnant women didn’t get a DTaP shot. (The data included only women.)

Separate research showed that pregnant women on Medicaid – who are more often lower-income and more often Black and Latinx – had far lower immunizati­on rates. A 2019 study, meanwhile, showed that Black pregnant women, in particular, were 30%less likely to get the flu shot compared with white ones. Those studies also included only women.

Private and public insurance aren’t treated equally. The Affordable Care Act bans cost-sharing for preventive services like medically recommende­d vaccines. But Medicaid has no such mandate. Experts say eliminatin­g co-pays and mandating vaccine coverage within Medicaid could close major socioecono­mic and racial disparitie­s.

But costs are only one barrier, noted Dr. Geeta Swamy, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University. There’s also the issue of whether a pregnant person’s primary doctor offers vaccines. If, for instance, patients are referred somewhere else for a shot, they’re far less likely to get one.

“I could look at you and say, ‘You should get it, but I can’t give it to you, you have to go downtown and park there and tell them you’re pregnant and wait in line,’ ” she said. “It’s not as convenient.”

Admon and Swamy agreed better data collection could go a long way in addressing vaccinatio­n shortfalls. But it should be coupled, they argued, with funding that could direct public health campaigns or otherwise help improve people’s odds of getting a vaccine.

Still, more robust Medicaid benefits could be undercut if the ACA – which will come before the Supreme Court this November – is ultimately struck down. Legal experts argue that the likely confirmati­on of Amy Coney Barrett as the court’s ninth justice increases the chance the law is overturned.

It’s easier to qualify for Medicaid when pregnant. But people covered through Medicaid may not be eligible for the assistance program before or after pregnancy, especially in states that opted out of the ACA’s provision to expand eligibilit­y.

If the ACA is overturned and no replacemen­t implemente­d, many more people would lose pre-pregnancy and postnatal insurance, Admon and Swamy said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States