Affiliation:
1. Maryland Population Research Center University of Maryland at College Park College Park Maryland USA
2. Maryland Population Research Center and Department of Sociology University of Maryland at College Park College Park Maryland USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveTo estimate the association of Medicaid coverage of abortion care with cumulative lifetime abortion incidence among women insured by Medicaid.Data Sources and Study SettingWe use 2016–2019 (Pre‐Dobbs) data from the Survey of Women studies that represent women aged 18–44 living in six U.S. states. One state, Maryland, has a Medicaid program that has long covered the cost of abortion care. The other five states, Alabama, Delaware, Iowa, Ohio, and South Carolina, have Medicaid programs that do not cover the cost of abortion care. Our sample includes 8972 women residing in the study states.Study DesignOur outcome, cumulative lifetime abortion incidence, is identified using an indirect survey method, the double list experiment. We use a multivariate regression of cumulative lifetime abortion on variables including whether women were Medicaid‐insured and whether they were residing in Maryland versus in one of the other five states.Data Collection/Extraction MethodsThis study used secondary survey data.Principal FindingsWe estimate that Medicaid coverage of abortion care in Maryland is associated with a 37.0 percentage‐point (95% CI: 12.3–61.4) higher cumulative lifetime abortion incidence among Medicaid‐insured women relative to women not insured by Medicaid compared with those differences by insurance status in states whose Medicaid programs do not cover the cost of abortion care.ConclusionsWe found that Medicaid coverage of abortion care is associated with a much higher lifetime incidence of abortion among individuals insured by Medicaid. We infer that Medicaid coverage of abortion care costs may have a very large impact on the accessibility of abortion care for low‐income women.
Funder
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development