The legislative budget conferees agreed last week to leave in place
nearly $62 million in cuts to the state's family planning program
authorized by the House in April, a move that advocates believe will
shutter dozens of small clinics – and leave 200,000 women without access
to basic health services. And although lawmakers have reauthorized the
successful Medicaid-waiver Women's Health Program, it is unclear
whether there will be enough providers left to keep up with the more
than 100,000 clients currently in the program. In short, cutting off
funding for family planning could strip the life out of the WHP.
The compromise budget plan leaves just $37.9 million in family
planning funding for the biennium, down from the roughly $99 million
originally allotted, which last year provided services to nearly 260,000
clients. Family-planning funding covers basic reproductive health
screenings, including Pap smears, as well as screenings for breast
cancer, hypertension, diabetes, and communicable diseases like HIV.
Although none of the money, pass-through federal funds, may be spent on
abortion, foes of family-planning services successfully framed the
defunding as a way to keep money away from providers that also provide
abortion care – namely their arch foe, Planned Parenthood. While Texas Right to Life
has dubbed the budget gutting as a victory for "life," the reality is
that Planned Parenthood will not be closing its doors; instead, the
nearly 100-year-old nonprofit will simply be unable to provide
preventative health care for the neediest Texas women. Moreover, the
cuts mean that many small providers, including independent health
clinics, will likely shut their doors this summer, says Fran Hagerty, CEO of the Women's Health and Family Planning Association of Texas, which represents many of the state's smaller women's health care providers.
Also included in the budget is a rider by Sen. Tommy Williams,
R-The Woodlands, which devises a matrix for allocating the funds that
remain: less than $19 million per year. According to the rider, the
funds must first be allocated by the Department of State Health Services
to "public entities" – including county and city health departments,
local community clinics, and federally qualified health centers –
that provide family planning services in addition to other health
services; remaining funds can then be awarded to "non-public" entities
that provide "comprehensive primary and preventative care as a part of
their family planning services"; then, if any money remains, it can then
be allocated to nonpublic providers of family-planning services – in
other words, Planned Parenthood and other specialized providers. The
thinking, of course, is that there won't be any money left for the third
tier. In fact, at this low level of funding, there isn't even enough
money to cover the needs of the providers in the first group. In 2010,
there were 25 "public" contractors and 26 FQHC contractors; together
these two groups received nearly $28 million to provide basic health
services to low-income Texas women (and some men). "It's almost
impossible to accept," says Hagerty. "Everybody loses."
Equally troubling is the ripple effect the massive budget cut could
have on the WHP, which provides family-planning services for women who
wouldn't otherwise be eligible for Medicaid unless they were pregnant.
In 2008, the program saved the state more than $40 million in Medicaid
costs. Before last week's reauthorization of WHP, it appeared the
program might die altogether because of a poison-pill measure written by
Sen. Robert Deuell, R-Greenville, which would have shut down the
program in the event that Planned Parenthood successfully sued over the
state's attempts to keep it from providing services under WHP.
Currently, Planned Parenthood serves some 40% of WHP clients. If the
state succeeds in keeping PP out of the mix, it is unclear who would be
left to serve WHP clients, says Hagerty. Many WHP providers also get
family-planning funding; without their federal tax money allocation to
provide those services, many won't be able to remain in business to
serve WHP clients, and the larger providers, like Dallas' Parkland Hospital,
will also be taking a hit, making the future of WHP's programs bleak.
"The little guys will close," she said. "And the big guys, like
Parkland, will be a skeleton of what they once were." If the WHP is
indeed crippled by the broader cuts to family planning, the state could
be cutting off well over 300,000 low-income Texans from access to basic
health services.
Meanwhile, the budget compromise actually includes a revenue increase for the Williams-created Alternatives to Abortion
program, which provides "counseling" and "support" to women in crisis
pregnancies, to encourage them to carry their pregnancies to term –
often with Medicaid support. The program has gotten a budget increase
each session since its creation in 2005 (with an initial $5 million
stake pulled from family-planning funds); this year lawmakers are
throwing in an additional $300,000, pushing its biennial budget up to
$8.3 million. The program provides no medical services, but does provide
referrals to other government programs. According to the compromise
budget, this money should provide "services" for roughly 16,000 women a
year; in contrast, last year the state's FQHCs got roughly $7.6 million
to provide actual medical care to more than 30,000 women. (For more on
the Legislature's attack on women, see "The War on Women's Health," April 22.)
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