Consider This from NPR - Republicans targeted abortion providers. Some Mainers lost primary care
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Maine Family Planning clinics treat STDs, bronchitis and tick bites. Because they also provide abortions, they've been hit by a new federal law that cuts them out of Medicaid. Now, they're cutting bac...k on services to try to survive.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Connor Donevan and Ava Berger, with audio engineering by Jimmy Keeley. It was edited by Diane Webber and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Abortion is a matter for the states. That is the position that President Trump took when he was running for re-election in 2024.
The Supreme Court, including three members he appointed, eliminated the constitutional right to an abortion in 2022.
And there were questions about a future national ban.
Trump said he wouldn't sign one.
The states will determine by vote or legislation or perhaps both.
And whatever they decide must be the law of the land.
in this case, the law of the state.
And he acknowledged in this video statement that it could mean a wide range of policies.
Many states will be different. Many will have a different number of weeks, or some will have
more conservative than others, and that's what they will be. At the end of the day,
this is all about the will of the people. But not everyone in his party agrees.
Dobs v. Jackson did not simply, quote, kick back the issue of abortion to the states.
That's Republican Congressman Bob Onder of Missouri, co-chair of the Pro-Life Caucus, speaking on the third anniversary of the Dobbs decision.
The wording in the court's opinion was very clear. The authority to regulate abortion is returned to the people and their elected representatives.
Members of Congress and senators are elected representatives.
And one of the measures Onder suggested was cutting off federal funding for Planned Parenthood.
The law already banned federal dollars from paying for abortions, but Planned Parenthood
provides other kinds of medical care, and the government has paid for some of it.
From 2019 to 2021, Planned Parenthood received $1.5 billion, yes, that's billion with a B,
from Medicaid chip, and $3.3 million from Medicare.
There is no reason we cannot immediately turn off Planned Parenthood's government cash flow.
And that's what Republicans did.
They included a provision in their one big, beautiful bill act that banned Medicaid payments to
large health care providers that offer abortions, and Trump signed it into law this summer.
Planned Parenthood called it a backdoor abortion ban.
This is going to be devastating for the patients that Planned Parenthood serves.
That's Alexis McGill Johnson, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
Planned Parenthood sued to block the law.
That challenge is still playing out in court.
The organization said the law put 200 clinics in jeopardy across the country.
The majority of Planned Parenthood Health Centers that are at risk of closure are.
in medically underserved areas.
They're in areas where there is primary care health shortage, right?
They're in rural areas.
Consider this.
The Republican's new funding restriction is aimed at abortion providers, but it is also
cutting some patients off from their primary care.
We'll look at how the law is playing out for a network of clinics in Maine.
From NPR, I'm Juana Summers.
It's Consider This from NPR.
Abortion is legal in Maine, and abortion access is widely supported.
Nearly three and four Mainers say it should be legal in all or most circumstances,
according to a recent report from the Pew Research Center.
But a network of clinics called Maine Family Planning is fighting for its survival because it provides abortions.
That new provision in the big Republican budget law passed this summer would cut the network out of Medicaid.
NPR's Selena Simmons-Duffin has been looking at the consequences of that.
It was winter 2020, the first COVID winter in Oxford, Maine.
Ashley Smith got a phone call from an ex-partner.
Somebody that I haven't spoken to in a couple months is like, oh, hey, I hate to reach out and tell you this, but...
They tested positive for a sexually transmitted infection called chlamydia.
I just quickly did a Google search to see who was.
going to be in the area that I could just schedule an STI test. And that Google search led me
to Maine Family Planning in Norway. Which was very close by, and they got her in quickly. Smith
works in restaurants as a server. She doesn't have health insurance, so she came ready to pay cash.
But the test was free. They made that process so easy and so painless. From then on,
that's where Smith went when she needed a doctor. Maine family planning has been around a long
time, 50 years. They have 18 clinics all over the rural state, so there was still one nearby when she moved. She's gone there for pap smears, breast exams. She once went to get a physical to work at a summer camp. I was like, I know that you guys offer primary care. Can you basically just take my weight and tell them that my blood pressure is okay? She says most importantly, they diagnosed a chronic condition for her, premenstrual dysphoric disorder. She says getting that treated has improved her quality of life dramatically. It's night and
day who I am. Clearly, she is a fan of Maine family planning, so much so that the 36-year-old
has turned into an advocate. In March, she fought off nerves to testify in the state legislature
at a committee hearing. I'm here because these nonprofit clinics are my only source of health care.
The need for advocacy is because of recent actions by the federal government, and because in
addition to cancer screenings and STI testing and all the rest, Maine family planning provides
abortion care. After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade three years ago, 12 states banned
abortion outright and more passed severe restrictions. States like Maine have moved in the
other direction to expand access. Now, the Republican-led federal government is moving to restrict
abortion access in states where it's legal and protected, using federal funding as its lever.
To be specific, Medicaid funding is now
unavailable to Maine family planning clinics for any services.
Vanessa Shields-Hoss is the nurse practitioner at the clinic in Thomaston, Maine, a small town along the coast.
This is our larger exam room. Here we do most of our yearly wellness visits. We do vulvar biopsies
and vasectomies and intrauterine inseminations as well. Just like Ashley Smith, who needed a basic
physical for her summer camp job, many of her reproductive health patients come in needing
primary care too. 70% of main family planning patients only see them as their doctor.
I can treat your tick bite or your bronchitis. I tell people if you cut your finger off
or you're having a heart attack, I'm going to send you to the emergency room. But there's a lot
of many other things that can be treated here. Clinics like this one were already prohibited
from getting Medicaid reimbursement for abortion because of the Hyde Amendment, which passed in
the 1970s. What's new now is a provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act,
congressional Republicans passed this summer, which blocks several health care organizations,
including Planned Parenthood and Maine Family Planning, from receiving any Medicaid funding for any
services for one year. So since July 4th, since the bill was passed, we haven't been reimbursed
for visits for patients who use Medicaid as their insurance. And we've been seeing all of those
patients for free. We haven't been turning them away. A lot of her patients do.
seasonal jobs. Half of main family planning's patients are on Medicaid. Maybe they're working at a hotel
or they're waiting tables, they're serving lobster rolls to hungry tourists, starting oyster
farms. These are entrepreneurs. These are people that are working really hard. Shields-Hoss tries to be there
for them for whatever they need. She's acutely aware that there aren't enough doctors in this rural
state. She calls the new law infuriating. Unfortunately, decision makers in Washington are having such a
profound impact on what we can and can't do. Not being able to be reimbursed for the visits
is, it's really crippling financially. The person tasked with troubleshooting that problem is
George Hill, Maine Family Planning's president and CEO. He works about an hour's drive away
at the organization's headquarters in Augusta. I've been in the field since 1987, so close to
40 years. Over those years, many presidential administrations have been hostile to their work, he says.
This is by volume and velocity, probably the worst that we have seen.
Maine Family Planning filed a lawsuit to challenge the law that blocks them from getting Medicaid funding.
In its response to the suit, the federal government said the provision furthers Congress's, quote,
goal of reducing abortion and suggested Maine Family Planning could stop providing abortions to get its funding back.
For now, while that lawsuit works its way through the courts, Maine Family Planning cannot receive Medicaid funding.
$2 million, 20% of their budget, gone.
That's difficult.
You have to make some difficult decisions.
Either you generate more money, more revenue, or you cut costs.
In the short term, they've had to cut some services.
On November 1st, Maine Family Planning ended primary care services at three clinics in the far
reaches of the state.
Staff helped nearly 1,000 patients find new doctors.
Hill hopes that decision will help preserve the rest of what they do.
We have a mission, and our mission is to.
to make sure that access to sexual and reproductive health care, the full range of sexual
and reproductive health care, is available to as many patients as possible.
They also received some additional funding from the state to help fill the gap.
And he says they're exploring new ways to raise revenue.
He quotes the late Democratic lawmaker Pat Schroeder.
You can't roll up your sleeves and get to work if you're wring in your hands.
We're going to keep doing what we're doing.
We're not going to stop.
That story came from NPR's Selena Simmons-Stuff.
reporting in Augusta Maine. Additional reporting at the top of this episode came from NPR's
Katie Riddle. This episode was produced by Connor Donovan and Ava Berger, with audio engineering by
Jimmy Keely. It was edited by Diane Weber and Courtney Dorney. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigin.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Juana Summers.
