New Data Show Planned Parenthood Medicaid Cut Causing Clinic Closures and Sharp Drop in Preventive Care
A report released Thursday by Senate Democratic leaders using internal Planned Parenthood data finds that six months after Congress’s One Big Beautiful Bill temporarily cut off Medicaid funding to high‑volume abortion providers, 23 of more than 500 Planned Parenthood health centers have closed and key preventive services have dropped sharply. Compared with a year earlier, breast exam visits fell 25% in December, IUD insertions nearly 40%, birth‑control pill visits 20% in November, and sexually transmitted infection testing more than 10% that month, according to self‑reported affiliate figures shared with over two dozen Democratic senators. The defunding provision, cleared by a federal court and signed into law last July, halts Medicaid dollars to organizations receiving more than $800,000 in annual Medicaid funding that also provide abortions, a standard that primarily hits Planned Parenthood despite Medicaid already being barred from paying for most abortions under the Hyde Amendment. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden are framing the new numbers as a warning as House Republicans’ Study Committee pushes to make the cutoff permanent in a second reconciliation package that Speaker Mike Johnson has said he wants this year. The data sharpen a national policy fight over whether targeting Planned Parenthood financially in the name of abortion restrictions is also shrinking access to contraception, cancer screenings and basic primary care for millions of largely low‑income patients who rely on Medicaid‑funded visits.
📌 Key Facts
- Since the One Big Beautiful Bill’s Medicaid cutoff took effect last year, 23 Planned Parenthood health centers out of more than 500 have closed.
- Planned Parenthood data show a 25% year‑over‑year decline in breast exam visits and nearly a 40% drop in IUD insertions in December, plus a 20% decline in birth‑control pill visits and more than 10% drop in STI testing in November.
- The law suspends federal Medicaid payments to organizations receiving more than $800,000 annually that provide abortions, primarily affecting Planned Parenthood, which took in more than $790 million in Medicaid funding between 2023 and 2024.
📊 Relevant Data
Nearly half of Black women (49%) report having gone to a Planned Parenthood clinic for care, compared to 40% of Hispanic women and 25% of White women, indicating higher reliance among Black and Hispanic women.
ICYMI: One in Three Women and One in Ten Men Have Gone to a Planned Parenthood Health Center for Care That’s at Risk if House Republicans Have Their Way — Planned Parenthood Action Fund
Black women have a 38% higher breast cancer mortality rate than White women, despite a 5% lower incidence rate, highlighting disparities in screening and outcomes.
Understanding Breast Cancer Racial Disparities — Breast Cancer Research Foundation
Black women are about 50% less likely than White women to receive same-day breast imaging or biopsy after abnormal mammograms, contributing to diagnostic delays.
Racial Disparities Found in Same-Day Breast Diagnostic Services — Breastcancer.org
Black (23.2%), Hispanic (21.0%), and Asian (23.0%) females are significantly less likely than White (45.6%) females to use oral contraceptive pills or long-acting reversible contraception.
Unintended pregnancy rates are higher among racial minorities, with Black and Hispanic women experiencing rates approximately twice that of White women.
Racial Disparities in Highly Effective Contraceptive Use Among U.S. Women: A Secondary Analysis of the 2017–2019 National Survey of Family Growth — Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
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