|
Health
care may soon cover fetuses
By
Laura Meckler
Associated Press
WASHINGTON States may classify a developing fetus as an unborn
child eligible for government health care, the Bush administration
said Thursday, giving low-income women access to prenatal care and
bolstering the arguments of abortion opponents.
The
plan will make a fetus eligible for health care under the State
Childrens Health Insurance Program. Because CHIP is aimed
at kids, it does not typically cover parents or pregnant women.
Health
and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson cited well-established
data on the importance of prenatal care in explaining the proposal.
Prenatal
care for women and their babies is a crucial part of the medical
care every person should have through the course of their life cycle,
Thompson said in a statement. Prenatal services can be a vital,
lifelong determinant of health, and we should do everything we can
to make this care available for all pregnant women.
States,
which administer CHIP, would have the option of including fetuses
in their programs. Doing so would make the mother eligible for prenatal
and delivery care.
Abortion
rights supporters complain that there are other ways to include
coverage for pregnant women in CHIP. They see Thursdays action
as a backdoor attempt to establish the fetus as a person with legal
standing, which could make it easier to criminalize abortion.
If
theyre interested in covering pregnant women, why dont
they talk about pregnant women? asked Laurie Rubiner of the
National Partnership for Women and Families. I just have to
believe their hidden agenda is to extend personhood to a fetus.
This
plan, she said, sets legal precedent on its head.
States
may already cover pregnant women under the health program, though
they have to get specific permission from HHS since CHIP was designed
for children, not adults.
Thompson
promotes these waivers as an excellent way of expanding health coverage
to people without insurance. He regularly brags about speeding the
time it takes for them to be approved by federal officials. But
in his statement Thursday, he said automatically including the fetus
is the quickest way to get prenatal services to the most women.
The
waiver process would take longer than extending it this way,
said HHS spokesman Campbell Gardett.
Thompson
said he also supports legislation pending in the Senate that would
allow states to automatically add pregnant women to CHIP, much as
poor pregnant women are eligible for Medicaid.
Administration
officials said last summer that they were considering this policy
change. At the time, the National Governors Association cautioned
HHS that while some states would embrace the new option and some
would immediately reject it, other states would face divisive battles
over whether to go along.
|