Hope for EACH Woman
- Story

Bold new legislation in Congress would restore access to essential reproductive services for millions of women denied coverage.
Five hundred dollars. Thatâs about what it costs for a woman to exercise her constitutional right to end a pregnancy in the United Statesânot including associated expenses such as travel, child care, and lost wages.
For some women, thatâs a deep breathâbut doable. For others, it will wipe out a savings account or send them into debt.
But for millions of low-income womenâfor whom every single cent available is already earmarked for rent and food and kidsâ$500 is an un-climbable mountain. It may as well be $500,000. As a result of current restrictions that deny abortion coverage to Medicaid recipients, one in four women receiving Medicaid seeking abortion care will be forced to carry an unwanted pregnancy to term.
One of these women is Laurie. A young mother of three working at Pizza Hut and trying to go back to school, Laurie was devastated when she found out she was pregnant again. She knew she could not afford itâfinancially or emotionally.
But due to a lack of Medicaid coverage, she found herself unable to obtain a legal abortion. The fact that Laurie had a constitutional right to end her pregnancy meant nothing without the ability to afford it.
âI was heartbroken. I cried and cried,â Laurie recalls. âAnd I think itâs an extra layer to have a unwanted pregnancy when you are poor and a woman of color. You know what it means to walk into the welfare office and add another child to your caseâeveryone thinking itâs your fault. You know youâre going to be âthat girl.â You feel the stigma. And you know that the moment your child comes in to this world, she will feel it, too.â
A historic piece of legislation introduced this month in Congress by Representatives Barbara Lee (D-CA), Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), and Diana DeGette (D-CO) would ensure that a lack of coverage no longer stands in the way of a woman making the best decision for herself and her family. The EACH Woman Act gives all women access to health coverage for abortion servicesâno matter how much money they make, what insurance plan they have, or where they live.
Take action. Tell the House to support the EACH Woman Act.
âThis is visionary lawmaking,â says Megan Donovan, federal policy counsel at the Center for Reproductive Rights. âFor too long, discriminatory policies such as the Hyde Amendment have taken a disproportionate toll on low-income women, immigrant women, young women, and women of color by banning insurance coverage for abortion care.â
Since 1976, the Hyde Amendment has barred Medicaid coverage of abortion except very limited circumstances. Numerous states also impose unfair and harmful limitations on insurance coverageâ whether a womanâs insurance is provided by her employer or the government, or purchased individually.
In addition to restoring coverage to Medicaid recipients, the EACH Woman Act would protect federal employees and their dependents, Peace Corps members, Native Americans, low-income residents of Washington, D.C., and federal prisonersâall of whom are currently denied abortion coverage. The bill would also prohibit political interference with decisions by private health insurance companies to cover abortion care.
Studies have shown that when a woman seeks an abortion but is denied, she is far more likely to fall into poverty than a woman who is able to get an abortion. When asked how a woman affords to have a baby if she canât afford an abortion, Laurie responds without a pause: âYou donât.â
âYouâre not livingâyou are existing. Youâre in survival mode. I dropped out of schoolâit just wasnât doableâand went back to waitressing after only four weeks,â Laurie remembers. âWe had some shockingly lean months. The baby slept with me because I couldnât afford a crib. I had to negotiate for everything we hadâfood, clothes. No one budgets better than a poor, single woman, but I still couldnât make ends meet.â
Of course, not all barriers are financial. Over the last few years, hundreds of new state laws have imposed restrictions on abortion care including mandatory delays, sham health regulations, and outright bans.
That is why in January of this year, Representatives Judy Chu (D-CA), Marcia Fudge (D-OH) and Lois Frankel (D-FL) reintroduced the Womenâs Health Protection Act. That bill would prohibit states from imposing unconstitutional restrictions on reproductive health providers that apply to no similar medical care, interfering with womenâs personal decision-making, and blocking access to abortion servicesâ.
âRight now, we are working to secure an environment where a womanâs right to make one of the most important decisions of her lifeâwhen and if to become a parentâis not dependent on where she lives or whatâs in her pocketbook,â says Donovan. âThese two complementary measures are essential components of that environment.â
The idea that a government has an obligation to ensure that women have access to safe health servicesâand that no woman is denied a legal abortion just because she cannot pay for itâis hardly groundbreaking. At the Center, we know from our global involvement in international human rights bodies and courts around the worldâfrom France to Uruguay to Nepalâthat coverage of abortion services is commonplace in countries that respect womenâs rights to health and self-determination.
We are committed to advancing the compassionate vision of the EACH Woman Act and the Womenâs Health Protection Actâand joining the ranks of nations that understand that a right without the ability to access it is not a right at all.
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