Wellness Brief
11 hours ago - Wellness Brief
Where doulas are covered by Medicaid
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More than half of U.S. states now reimburse for doula care under Medicaid — but Texas isn't among those states.
The latest: The Texas Legislature passed a maternal health care bill in 2025, but it doesn't have a concrete Medicaid coverage plan.
- The Texas Doula Association, an advocacy group, says on its website, "At this time, TDA is not confident that access to Doula care will be a priority" in the wake of Medicaid cuts.
By the numbers: 28 states and D.C. are actively reimbursing, according to the National Health Law Program. Before 2020, only Oregon and Minnesota did.
- For the rest of the country, that's "a lot of progress" in a few years, says Amy Chen, senior attorney at the National Health Law Program.
Yes, but: Expanding coverage could create a catch-22.
- The more doulas get folded into insurance systems, the more regulated they become. Their effectiveness, however, may stem precisely from being unregulated and fully answerable to patients, says Nicole Sessions, a doula and maternal mental health researcher in Atlanta.
- "The insurance model isn't quite savvy enough to hold the nuances of the profession just yet," she says, citing limits insurers may place on billable postpartum hours.
- Reimbursement maximums vary widely — from less than $800 to more than $3,000. Experienced doulas may not sign on if rates fall below their typical charges.
The big picture: Sessions worries that doula care is becoming a temporary fix — absorbing pressure that should be driving deeper changes to the obstetric system.
