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Braidwood Management v Becerra Puts Over a Decade of Progress in Preventive Health Care At Risk

WASHINGTON (Oct. 17, 2023)— A brief filed on behalf of 111 public health and health law and policy Deans and Scholars, the American Public Health Association, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Trust for America’s Health, and ChangeLab Solutions highlights new findings on the preventive health gains at stake in Braidwood Management v Becerra. The case is now pending in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Briefing by the parties and amici is set to finish, and oral arguments are expected in the coming months.

On appeal, the plaintiffs have reinstated their initial claim, which argues that all free preventive benefits guaranteed by the Affordable Care Act are unconstitutional. Swept into their claims, as a result, are not only recommendations made by the United States Preventive Health Services Task Force (USPSTF) since March 2010, but also all recommendations related to women’s health, children’s health, and vaccines adopted since passage of the Affordable Care Act. Braidwood would  have far-reaching consequences, and according to the research, especially affect maternal and child health care.

“The evidence is overwhelming that mothers and children in particular take advantage of free preventive services,” Anne Markus, professor and Chair of the Department of Health Policy and Management at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health, said. “In the absence of prevention, much more expensive remedial treatments will follow.  The old adage ‘penny wise and pound foolish’ springs to mind.”

Major Findings Across Four Separate Analyses

The Deans and Scholars / APHA brief draws on evidence contained in a series of new analyses regarding the potential health impact of Braidwood. Together the analyses, prepared by researchers at Milken Institute School of Public Health at the George Washington University,  contain the following major findings:

Maternal and child health

According to the authors, use of these services is widespread, and between 2018 and 2022 their use increased dramatically. An analysis of billions of private insurance claims in the FAIR Health National Private Insurance Claims (FH NPIC®) dataset shows enormous and growing use.  An analysis of 2.8 billion private insurance claims in 2022 shows that:

A further analysis, of 1.4 billion longitudinal claims in 2018 and 2.8 billion longitudinal claims in 2022, shows substantial increases in use of covered services:

 

 

Access to Free Immunization Services

Coverage for numerous immunizations at no cost also is at risk, including the flu vaccine and the newly approved, lifesaving RSV vaccine for pregnant women and infants.

 

Access to Preventive Care in Underserved Communities

Particularly hard hit could be residents of medically underserved urban and rural communities who depend on community health centers for primary care, since preventive care coverage enables health centers to expand the reach of their preventive care activities. An analysis of national community health center data in 2022 shows that millions of patients depend on CHCs for preventive care:

 

“Nationally, community health centers are a cornerstone for access to preventive care,” Feygele Jacobs, Director of the Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health and Professor of Health Policy and Management at GW, said. “If free preventive care is eliminated as a result of Braidwood, millions of people could lose coverage. This affects not only their immediate and long-term health but jeopardizes the stability of preventive care services in medically underserved communities.”

 

-GW-