In the remote western plains of Texas, the Midland-Odessa region is separated from the nearest major city by hours of open road. So when the Planned Parenthood clinic in Midland closed down in late 2013 – a casualty of legislative cuts that targeted Planned Parenthood directly – it served as an isolated experiment in what happens when the government defunds the largest women’s healthcare provider around.
“I hate to say it, but I think an awful lot of women just opted to go without care,” said Mike Austin.
Austin is chief executive of Midland Community Healthcare Services (MCHS), a federally-funded network of providers that has emerged as the only major alternative to Planned Parenthood in the area. His clinic offers all of the same services the Midland Planned Parenthood once did, including contraception, cancer screenings and STI tests, to the same kind of patients, low-income women who rely on the public safety net for their healthcare.
In fact, just before the Planned Parenthood clinic shut down, the two providers made a plan to minimize the fallout. Planned Parenthood sent nearly 5,000 patient medical records – up to 1,000 belonging to active patients – directly to MCHS.
But to Austin’s dismay, only about 100 former Planned Parenthood patients ever showed up at his door.
“We are seeing a subsequent rise in STDs and a subsequent rise in unplanned pregnancies,” Austin said. He believes they could be linked. “And I’m sitting here going, ‘See? I told you so. This is what happens.’”
In the weeks ahead, members of Congress will replicate Midland’s experiment on a grand scale by defunding Planned Parenthood across the country. They will do so in the form of a budget that blocks Planned Parenthood from accepting Medicaid, the government-funded insurance for low-income individuals.
It’s a move Republicans have long framed as a rebuke of Planned Parenthood’s role in providing abortions – even though Medicaid is prohibited from covering abortions by law, and only half of Planned Parenthood clinics even offer the procedure.
What Medicaid does do is allow Planned Parenthood to provide contraception, cancer screenings and STI tests to 1.5 million patients in the public safety net at some 650 health centers for no cost. About two-fifths of the organization’s $ 1.3 billion annual budget derives from public funding. Without the reimbursements Medicaid provides, a spokeswoman for the Planned Parenthood said, an unknown number of those centers will have to close.
House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin recently predicted that federally funded health centers – like the one in Midland – could pick up where Planned Parenthood left off. “They’re in virtually every community,” he said at a recent town hall, “providing the same kinds of services.”
But public health officials such as Austin, who work in states where Planned Parenthood’s presence is already in decline, are sounding the alarm. They say the loss of Planned Parenthood would imperil the health of thousands of women who already face high barriers for care.
And some of the strongest voices in opposition come from Ryan’s own backyard.
“They’ve never replaced the services of Planned Parenthood,” said Gail Scott, director of health in Jefferson County, Wisconsin. Her county, which lost the Johnson Creek Planned Parenthood in 2013, bumps up against Ryan’s congressional district. “I’m not pro-abortion or anything,” she said. “But I can tell you nothing ever replaced those services for uninsured people.”
The clinics in Johnson Creek closed because lawmakers in Wisconsin, as in Texas, approved a series of family planning cuts targeted directly at Planned Parenthood. Today, Scott said, when the Jefferson County health department gets calls from low-income women looking for a place to obtain contraception, staff recommend they travel to another county – where there’s still a Planned Parenthood.
Chippewa County, Wisconsin, also lost its Planned Parenthood clinic. Jean Durch, the county health director at the time who is now retired, recalled that after the closure, there was no place in Chippewa for women to receive STI tests, even though her department sought the funding to make it happen.
“We never were able, before I retired, to pick up the full complement of services” of Planned Parenthood, she said.
And Shawano County, Wisconsin, which is experiencing a flare-up in gonorrhea and which the state government recently designated a hot-spot for new chlamydia infections, is still feeling the pressure. After the Planned Parenthood there closed, former patients faced significant waiting lists to see a doctor at local community health clinics. The health department didn’t know where to send women for certain services.
“The clinic that closed in Shawano served the whole county,” said Jaime Bodden, the Shawano County health director. Not just women on Medicaid, she said, but women with stingy insurance and women with no insurance at all. Now, the county health department is virtually on its own as it combats the region’s rising STI rates.
“It’s something that we still often talk about,” she said. “We say, ‘Wouldn’t it be nice to have Planned Parenthood in town?’”
‘A national healthcare disaster’
Planned Parenthood officials say Wisconsin would continue to be hard-hit if Congress went through with its plans for defunding. A disproportionate number of its patients there are Medicaid beneficiaries and women of color – groups of people who already face barriers to accessing care.
Already, some of their patients are worried about gaps in their health care if Planned Parenthood were to disappear.
“I have to get that care,” said Courtney Kessler, 22, of Madison, Wisconsin, who has a family history of ovarian cancer and has gone to Planned Parenthood for cancer screenings and contraception for seven years. She is on a public safety net program that covers the costs. “I don’t know where else I would go. I would have to spend time finding somewhere else to go, and worry about, can I afford it? And worry about, am I getting the same quality of care I get with Planned Parenthood? It’s only making it more difficult for people already having struggles.”
Planned Parenthood operates 22 locations in 15 Wisconsin counties, with just two providing abortion services. A new survey conducted by Health Management Associates, a healthcare consulting firm, and paid for by Planned Parenthood, concluded that in seven of those counties there are no viable alternatives to Planned Parenthood for family planning services. In four other counties, there is only one viable alternative. Two counties that would have no alternative if Planned Parenthood were to close – Racine and Walworth – comprise part of speaker Ryan’s district.
The notion that overnight they can serve two million more people who need reproductive health services is absurd
The survey also concluded that many alternatives offer limited hours and do not stock all the most effective contraceptives – making it questionable that they are truly alternatives to Planned Parenthood.
Raegan McDonald-Mosley, Planned Parenthood’s chief medical officer, said this pattern holds across the country. In 332 of the 491 counties where it had locations in 2010, the latest year numbers were available, Planned Parenthood served at least half of the women obtaining contraception through the public safety net. In 103 of those counties, Planned Parenthood was the only safety net provider for family planning.
“We play a hugely important role in family planning safety net around the country,” said McDonald-Mosley. If those clinics were no longer options for many women, “It would truly be a national healthcare disaster.”
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