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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 26, 2022
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Releases Maternity Care
Action Plan to Implement Biden-Harris Maternal Health Blueprint;
Launches Industry Call to Action
CMS Administrator to
stakeholders: “We can — and will — do better.”
Today,
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) unveiled its
Maternity Care Action Plan to support the implementation of the Biden-Harris Administration’s Blueprint for
Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis. The action plan takes
a holistic and coordinated approach across CMS to improve health outcomes
and reduce inequities for people during pregnancy, childbirth, and the
postpartum period. CMS’ implementation of the action plan will support
the Biden-Harris Administration’s broad vision and call to action to
improve maternal health.
“Strengthening
maternal health is key to strengthening the health and wellbeing of
communities across America,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “At
HHS, we are taking unprecedented action to advance the Biden-Harris
Administration’s vision to improve maternal health and tackle
disparities, and I’m proud of the bold action plan CMS has laid out to
contribute to our goals. Today is just the beginning: we will
tirelessly work to make sure all mothers get the care and support they
need.”
Through
the action plan, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure also
encouraged industry stakeholders – including health care facilities,
insurance companies, state officials, and providers – to consider key
commitments the private sector can make to improve maternal health
outcomes. Industry can submit proposed commitments at http://cms.gov/maternalhealthcommitments.
“The
United States is facing a worsening maternal health crisis,” said CMS
Administrator Brooks-LaSure. “Enough is enough. We can – and will – do
better. CMS will use every available lever to support people during
pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period, and advance health
equity across the country. Our action plan is built on promising
approaches, like extending postpartum coverage in Medicaid, which
already covers more than 40 percent of births nationwide, to advance
equitable, high-quality maternity care and reduce unnecessary maternal
illnesses and deaths.”
In
addition to today’s action plan, CMS approved new actions in Connecticut, Kansas,
and Massachusetts to extend Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) coverage for 12 months after pregnancy. As a
result, up to an additional 19,000 people annually in these states –
including 4,000 in Connecticut; 7,000 in Kansas; and 8,000 in
Massachusetts – will have access to Medicaid or CHIP coverage for a
full year after pregnancy.
This
extension of coverage was made possible by a new state plan opportunity
established by the American Rescue Plan. The states extending
postpartum coverage today join California; Florida; Illinois; Kentucky;
Louisiana; Maine; Michigan; Minnesota; New Jersey; New Mexico; Oregon;
South Carolina; Tennessee; Virginia; Washington, D.C.; and Washington
state in extending Medicaid and CHIP coverage from 60 days to a full 12
months after pregnancy. Now, during the Biden-Harris Administration, an
estimated 284,000 parents are eligible for 12 months of postpartum
coverage through Medicaid and CHIP extensions. If all states adopted
this option, as many as 720,000 people across the United States
annually could be guaranteed Medicaid and CHIP coverage for 12 months
after pregnancy.
Access
to care across the lifespan is crucial to women’s health and birth
outcomes. In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health
Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, CMS is working to ensure
access to the full range of reproductive health care services —
including IUDs, emergency contraception, other forms of contraception,
and abortion care within the agency’s legal authority (in cases where
the individual’s life is in danger, or in cases of rape or incest).
CMS
also took another significant step toward improved maternity care by
outlining its proposal for a “Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation,
a key feature of the maternal health strategy, in the 2023 Inpatient and Long-term Care Hospital
Prospective Payment System proposed rule released this year.
The designation would be publicly displayed on a CMS website to provide
information to consumers on hospitals that have demonstrated a
commitment to maternity care quality by implementing best practices
that advance health care quality, safety, and equity for pregnant and
postpartum patients.
Initially,
the designation would be awarded to hospitals based on their reporting
of the Maternal Morbidity Structural Measure in the Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting (IQR) Program. The proposed rule also introduces two
additional maternal health quality measures for the Hospital IQR
Program regarding low-risk Cesarean deliveries and severe obstetric
complications.
Postpartum
coverage extensions, the new “Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation,
and additional quality measures are just several of the diverse tools
comprising the CMS Maternity Care Action Plan, including:
- Coverage and Access to Care: CMS is working to improve access to
comprehensive health coverage, including for those eligible
through Medicaid and CHIP, the Health Insurance Marketplace®,
and Medicare coverage; and to help ensure continuity of coverage
from before, during, and after pregnancy.
- Data: CMS is working to expand its data collection
efforts, build a better understanding of key demographic drivers
of health to identify disparities in care or outcomes, and
coordinate across programs to identify gaps and best practices.
- Quality of Care: As we develop new policy, CMS will engage with
people with lived experience, and work with states, providers, and
other key stakeholders to improve the quality of care that
Medicaid and CHIP, Medicare, and Health Insurance Marketplace®
enrollees receive during pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum.
- Workforce: CMS will work with states and sister agencies
to identify opportunities to expand and improve access to a
diverse maternity care workforce, including midwives and community-based
practitioners, such as doulas and community health workers.
- Social supports: CMS will work to build connections between the
care and supports CMS programs cover and the social supports
provided by other federal, state, and local partners, with the
goal of providing whole-person care to pregnant and postpartum
enrollees.
For
more information on CMS plans and programs, consult the maternal health
action plan in its entirety on CMS.gov.
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