HHS Announces Efforts to Help Expand
Nationwide Access and Coverage for High-quality Maternal Health
Services
As
part of Vice President Kamala Harris’s Call to Action to Reduce
Maternal Mortality and Morbidity, the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS), is taking steps to improve maternal health and support
the delivery of equitable, high-quality care for pregnancy and
postpartum care. CMS intends to propose a “Birthing-Friendly”
designation to drive improvements in perinatal health outcomes and
maternal health equity. The designation would initially identify
hospitals that provide perinatal care, are participating in a maternity
care quality improvement collaborative, and have implemented
recommended patient safety practices.
In
addition, CMS is encouraging states to take advantage of the American
Rescue Plan’s (ARP’s) option to provide 12 months postpartum coverage
to pregnant individuals who are enrolled in Medicaid or the Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP). This follows the release of a report
by HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE) showing the dramatic impact if states extended Medicaid
postpartum coverage to 12 months. If every state adopted an extension —
as proposed in the Build Back Better Act — then the number of Americans
getting coverage for a full year postpartum would roughly double,
extending coverage for an estimated 720,000 in a given year.
Medicaid
and CHIP cover over 42 percent of births in the nation,
nearly half of which are to Black, Hispanic, or American Indian/Alaskan
Native individuals. Extending the postpartum coverage period can
improve health outcomes during the postpartum period and mitigate
health disparities for individuals served by Medicaid and CHIP.
“As
a father to three daughters and husband to a high-risk obstetrician, I
know nothing is more important as having healthy childbirth,” said HHS
Secretary Xavier Becerra. “I’m proud that the Biden-Harris
Administration has made maternal health and equity a priority. We will
continue to take actions to support new parents and ensure safe
pregnancies, no matter a family’s background.”
“No
mother should have to fight for her coverage or care during pregnancy
or while caring for a newborn. CMS is doing everything we can to
support the health of new parents and families, and to advance health
equity across the country,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita
Brooks-LaSure. “Across the Biden-Harris Administration, we are
committed to advancing equitable, high-quality maternity care, and
reducing unnecessary postpartum illnesses and deaths that
disproportionately harm people of color.”
Beginning
with discharges on October 1, 2021, CMS adopted a new structural
quality measure for the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program
that asks hospital to attest to whether they participate in a statewide
and/or national maternal safety quality collaborative and whether they
have implemented the recommended patient safety practices or bundles to
improve maternal outcomes. Through this measure and others CMS
intends to propose, a hospital could be considered “Birthing-Friendly”
with special designation on CMS’ “Care Compare” website.
Maintaining
Medicaid and CHIP coverage for an extended period of time can help
address persistent disparities that exist in pregnancy-related morbidity and mortality.
One-third of maternal deaths occur between one week to a year after
childbirth, and rates are especially high among Black women and
American Indian/Alaska Native individuals. Expanded coverage helps to
ensure access to the ongoing care people need during the postpartum
period. It will also help individuals in the postpartum period manage chronic
conditions like hypertension and diabetes, and provide access to
behavioral health services.
Currently,
Medicaid beneficiaries are entitled to continuous coverage through the
end of the month in which their 60-day postpartum period ends. In
states that adopt the new extended postpartum coverage option,
individuals who are enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP while pregnant will be
eligible for 12 months of extended postpartum coverage. Additional
individuals who will benefit from a state’s election are those whose
pregnancy ended within three-months of their application for Medicaid
and who would have been eligible when their pregnancy ended had they
applied earlier.
The
State Health Official letter includes guidance and resources for states
that take up the state plan option to ensure that the extended coverage
leads to improved health outcomes for postpartum individuals. CMS is
available to provide technical assistance to states as they extend
postpartum coverage, implement innovative payment and delivery system
efforts, and engage in initiatives to measure and improve quality aimed
at addressing the needs of pregnant and postpartum beneficiaries.
States that elect to provide the extended postpartum coverage option
are encouraged to educate beneficiaries about the availability of
extended postpartum coverage.
To
read the HHS ASPE Issue Brief, visit: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/potential-state-level-effects-extending-postpartum-coverage.
For
more information about the Maternal Morbidity Structural Measure go to: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/maternal-morbidity-structural-measure-specifications.pdf.
To
see a copy of the State Health Official Letter, please visit: https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/sho21007.pdf.
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