Equality in Abortion Coverage Act tries to provide all pregnant people access to the full range of reproductive health services
The Rhode Island House Judiciary Committee heard testimony on the Equality in Abortion Coverage Act (EACA) during a rare Monday afternoon session.
The EACA would
eliminate the state policy that withholds health coverage for abortion in both
the Medicaid program and the state’s employee health plan. You can
watch the full hearing here:
The EACA (H5006), said bill sponsor
Representative Katherine Kazarian (Democrat, District
63, East Providence), “is a simple bill that addresses a simple issue. This
bill would fix the inequality in insurance coverage for abortion access in
Rhode Island. Right now an abortion is the only medical procedure that is not
covered by all types of medical insurance plans offered in our state.”
Representative Kazarian also stated that “abortion is healthcare” – a claim belied by the policy of House leadership to hear bills on abortion in the Judiciary Committee, which deals with issues of legality, instead of the House Health and Human Services Committee, which, as the name suggests, deals with health issues. Representative Kazarian, a member of House leadership, took over the EACA legislation this year after the House failed to pass the bill in previous years when it was submitted by former Representative Liana Cassar.
The day after
session ended last year, the United States Supreme Court reversed Roe
v. Wade. [See: 21 members of the House implored Speaker Shekarchi to
bring the EACA to a vote – to no avail]
Medicaid covers about 25% of Rhode Islanders, including 77,000 potentially pregnant people. Medicaid is designed to provide medical coverage to the state’s lowest wage earners, people with disabilities, and current and former foster youth.
What this lack of coverage means is that people unable to
afford an abortion are sometimes forced to carry an unwanted pregnancy to term,
a state of affairs that can burden not only a person’s health and economic
wellbeing, but the health and economic wellbeing of the other children in a
household.
What are the consequences of being denied a wanted or needed abortion?During Tuesday’s hearing Representative Jose Batista (Democrat, District 12, Providence) asked Gretchen Raffa, Vice President of Public Policy and Organizing at Planned Parenthood of Southern New England, if there were any studies or data that might show the number of people who have not been able to avail themselves of a wanted abortion due to lack of access. In her response to Representative Batista, Raffa mentioned The Turnaway Study.
The Turnaway Study found
that claims from abortion opponents about the “detrimental effects on women’s
health of having an abortion” are not supported by evidence. People who have an
abortion are not “more likely than those denied the procedure to have
depression, anxiety, or suicidal ideation” the study found. Instead, the study
finds that “95% of women report that having the abortion was the right decision
for them over five years after the procedure.”
The Turnaway Study found
that there are negative consequences of carrying an unwanted pregnancy to term,
including:
·
Being four times more
likely of living below the Federal Poverty Level (FPL);
·
Being more likely to
experience serious complications from the end of pregnancy including eclampsia
and death;
·
Being more likely to
stay tethered to abusive partners;
·
Being more likely to
suffer anxiety and loss of self-esteem in the short term after being denied
abortion;
·
Being less likely to
have aspirational life plans for the coming year;
·
Being more likely to
experience poor physical health for years after the pregnancy, including
chronic pain and gestational hypertension; and,
·
The study found that
being denied abortion has serious implications for the children born of
unwanted pregnancy, as well as for the existing children in the family.
The Equality in Abortion
Coverage Act is an attempt to provide all pregnant people important access to
the full range of reproductive health services, including abortion. Not passing
the EACA perpetuates systemic poverty and prejudices.