Nearly half of pregnancies in the U.S. are unplanned, and there’s a wide gap between the most affluent women who are likely to have access to the most reliable forms of birth control and those from lower income households.
But removing out-of-pocket costs for contraception may help reduce the income-related disparities that play such a significant role in unintended pregnancies, a new Michigan Medicine-led study suggests.
The Affordable Care Act’s elimination of cost-sharing for birth control was associated with more consistent contraceptive use and a decrease in birth rates among all income groups, according to the research in JAMA Network Open.
But the most prominent decline was seen among people from the lowest income group, which saw a 22 % drop in births from before and after the law’s implementation.
“Our findings suggest that expanded coverage of prescription contraception may be associated with a reduction in income-related disparities in unintended pregnancy rates,” says lead author Vanessa Dalton, M.D., M.P.H., obstetrician gynecologist at Michigan Medicine Von Voigtlander Women’s Hospital and researcher with the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.
“Reducing unintended pregnancies improves the health of women, families and society.”
The ACA included contraception on its list of preventative services that most employer-sponsored insurance plans were required to provide without cost-sharing. This meant that many women had access to birth control, including the most reliable long-acting forms like intrauterine devices, without out-of-pocket costs like copayments or deductible payments.
Michigan researchers examined birth rates by income among 4.6 million women ages 15-45 covered by employer-sponsored health plans before the ACA’s elimination of cost sharing (2008-2013) and after (2014-2018).
In addition to lower birth rates, authors also reported a decrease in annual rates of women not filling a prescription method of contraception after 2014. The two lowest household income groups experienced a more rapid decrease than the higher income group.
The findings are consistent with previous studies showing that removing out-of-pocket costs for contraception is associated with increased consistent use of the most effective methods to prevent unplanned pregnancies, Dalton says.
“Contraception is a clinically efficient and cost effective strategy for reducing unintended pregnancy and helping individuals meet their reproductive life goals,” says Dalton, who is also the director of the U-M Program on Women’s Healthcare Effectiveness Research (PWHER.)
“Policies that eliminate cost sharing for contraception will help us achieve our clinical goals of ensuring that all families can decide whether and when to have children.
This policy particularly benefits people with low incomes who may be more deterred by birth control prices and may have also had less comprehensive insurance coverage before the ACA.”
Unplanned pregnancies are associated with delayed prenatal care, reduced likelihood of breastfeeding, maternal depression, and higher maternal and infant mortality rates, Dalton notes.
“Mistimed births have serious, long term, life opportunity consequences for women and children,” Dalton says.
They have a societal cost too, including an estimated $5 billion per year in direct and indirect costs for the U.S. health care system. In 2011, 42 % of unintended pregnancies (excluding miscarriages) ended in abortion and two thirds of unplanned births were funded by public insurance programs such as Medicaid.
Authors note that recent court decision, including the 2020 Supreme Court decision upholding rules that expand exceptions from the contraceptive requirement could roll back improvement in access for some women.
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