Doulas Push Back Against California's Proposal to Pay Them Shockingly Low Rates
This was supposed to be the year that low-income Californians could hire a doula to guide them through pregnancy and advocate for them in the hospital.
But the new benefit for people enrolled in Medi-Cal, the states Medicaid health insurance program, has been delayed twice as the state and doulas nonmedical workers who help parents before, during, and after birth haggle over how much they should get paid.
The state initially proposed a flat rate of $450 per birth, covering all prenatal and postnatal visits, on-call time during the pregnancy, and labor and delivery which often lasts 12 or more hours.
Doulas say that amount is too low, and far less than their clients would pay out-of-pocket. Its also below what doulas receive from Medicaid programs in most other states that offer the benefit.
The only state that pays less is Oregon, where doulas receive up to $350 per birth. The reimbursement rates of other states that offer doula services through Medicaid are usually between $770 and $900. When Rhode Island implements its benefit in July, it will be the highest-paying state, offering doulas up to $1,500.
In most states that offer a doula benefit, the rate Medicaid programs pay is a maximum, which doulas receive if the patient attends every prenatal and postnatal visit. Unlike obstetricians, who see many patients in a day, most doulas accept only a few clients a month.
https://truthout.org/articles/doulas-push-back-against-californias-proposal-to-pay-them-shockingly-low-rates/
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Once again, devaluing women and women's work