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Colorado teen pregnancies dropped 20 percent near these clinics. Now their funding is at risk

Funding is at risk for the clinics after rule changes place restrictions on abortion services

DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 03: Denver Post reporter Jessica Seaman. (Photo By Patrick Traylor/The Denver Post)
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By increasing access to long-term birth control such as intrauterine devices, Colorado has reduced teen pregnancies by about 20 percent in zip codes near clinics that receive federal funding, a new report finds.

Teen births have dropped through a state program that helped clinics cover the costs of expensive contraceptives such as IUDs, making them more accessible to low-income women, according to the report by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

But funding for those so-called Title X clinics could be at risk as rule changes to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ family planning program will place restrictions on those that also provide abortion services, according to officials and experts.

“The risk there is that those funds were going to be providing contraceptives or preventive care,” said Andrea Kelly, a co-author of the study and Ph.D. student at Texas A&M University. “Now, if they are going away… it’s even harder to provide those services.”

Under the changes, clinics that receive federal Title X funding will be prohibited from referring patients for abortions and from housing family planning services in the same physical location as abortion providers.

Federal money already cannot go toward abortions, but funding could drop if clinics no longer qualify or leave the program because of the changes. Colorado’s health department receives about $3.8 million a year from the Title X program.

Officials, including Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, have said the changes to the Title X program could result in jumps in teen births, unintended pregnancies and abortions. Multiple states, including Colorado, are seeking to stop the changes via lawsuits.

The new report found that birth rates dropped significantly in zip codes within seven miles of Title X clinics in Colorado, which the report says is the result of more teenagers and women gaining access to long-term, reversible contraceptives. The report looked at data between 2008 and 2015.

Jody Camp, family planning section manager for the state health department, called the study “fair.” She said Colorado has seen abortions and teen pregnancies drop as a result of the department expanding its contraceptive program.

Statewide, the birth rate for women between ages 15 and 19 dropped 59 percent during an eight-year period that ended in 2017, according to the most recent data available from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Long-term birth control measures, such as IUDs, are more effective than other methods, including condoms and pills, according to the health department.

This is a box of Nexplanon ...
Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file
A box of Nexplanon, a long term birth control method, is pictured in this file photo taken at the Boulder Valley Women’s Health Center in Boulder, Colorado on July 29, 2015. The implant, among a variety of long term birth control options for young women, is put under the skin in the upper arm and lasts for up to three years.

But the contraceptives are more expensive. An IUD can cost clinics as much as $700, compared to a pack of birth-control pills that can be bought for a penny, Camp said.

The department helps clinics cover the cost because the facilities offer the contraceptives to patients on a sliding-fee scale that is based on how much an individual can pay, she said.

“A lot of Colorado women chose them,” she said of long-term birth control. “And a lot of young Colorado women chose them.”