- New Clues Explain Why Immunotherapy Fails in Pancreatic Cancer
- Does My Child Have a Language Disorder?
- Journalists Talk Hot Health Topics: Urgent Care Clinics Performing Abortions and Doulas’ Pay
- ASCs’ vendor problem
- Providence’s physician chief on its ‘holistic’ approach to value-based care
- What the Health? From KFF Health News: A New CDC Nominee, Again
- States Update Guardianship Laws To Keep Children of Immigrants Out of Foster Care
- Anesthesia job market faces ‘major disruption’
- Florida system raises $100M for new ED
- North Carolina system names COO
- Mark Cuban wants to bring drug manufacturing to hospitals’ doorsteps — literally
- UCI Health names chief AI officer
- Nevada hospital names CEO
- Saint Luke’s taps president for 2 hospitals
- Dental community mourns dentist killed in murder-suicide
- Mass General Brigham, CVS deal could raise healthcare spending $40M annually: Report
- Ideal Dental opens 1st Oklahoma practice, expands in 2 more states
- PDS Health eyes the next era of medical-dental integration
- Mark Cuban dives into direct contracting
- HCA executive pay by the numbers
- Iris Telehealth offers behavioral health analytics platform
- HHS names chief economist, regulatory leader to address healthcare affordability
- Loma Linda University Health names new president
- The best ASCs for colonoscopy, endoscopy in the South: US News
- Tennessee moves forward with CON repeal
- Dental schools take action to alleviate workforce shortages: 6 updates
- American Medical Group Association partners with Talkiatry to expand psych access
- Trump nominates CDC director
- ChristianaCare, Cardiovascular Physicians of Delaware to open joint venture ASC
- 5 states regulating AI in mental health
- Centerstone debuts $13M youth behavioral health campus in Missouri
- 3 DSOs making headlines
- Maine restricts noncompetes for rural healthcare workers
- Heartland Dental opens Florida office
- The 10 biggest ASC deals of the last 5 years
- Affordability, transparency: A look at large employers' top healthcare concerns
- 10 dental Medicaid updates to know from Q1
- White House eyes ibogaine research expansion
- New Weight Loss Research Questions Need for GLP-1 Drugs
- Trump Names CDC Director Pick
- SocialRx teams up with FQHC in NYC to prescribe arts and culture for chronically ill patients
- FDA To Review Whether To Allow More Access To Certain Peptides
- Rising Colon Cancer Deaths Hit Younger Adults Without Degrees Hardest
- The Healthccare Burnout Backlask (pt 4): Why Contract Negotiation Has Become a Core Strategic Skill for Healthcare Administrators
- The Healthccare Burnout Backlask (pt 4): Why Contract Negotiation Has Become a Core Strategic Skill for Healthcare Administrators
- Over 80% of PCPs concerned about financial stability over next several years
- Industry Voices—DOJ jumps into 340B cases over state law, raising questions about federal plans for the program
- FDA's accelerated approval pathway needs stronger transparency, evidence standards: ICER
- Most People Would Take A Blood Test For Alzheimer's, Study Says
- This Sexually Transmitted Infection Linked To Heart Attack, Stroke
- How Playtime at Age 2, Especially with Parents, Shapes Teen Fitness Habits
- New Depression Treatment Matches ECT with Less Memory Loss, Study Says
- Memory Problems? Your Salt Intake Could Make Matters Worse, Study Says
- Ultra-Processed Foods Linked To Fatty Muscles, Potential Knee Arthritis
- Your New Therapist: Chatty, Leaky, and Hardly Human
- Teva scores in appeal as court revives $177M verdict against Lilly in migraine patent spat
- Gen AI chatbots continually struggle with differential diagnoses, Mass General Brigham study finds
- Listen: With Little Federal Regulation, States Are Left To Shape the Rules on AI in Health Care
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Astellas’ stem cell therapy rethink; GSK’s bullish ADC plan; Daiichi’s OTC sale
- BIO comes out swinging with 'Fight of Our Lives' campaign for the industry’s 50th birthday
- The future of medical-dental integration is here
- Texas dentist has license suspended
- Efforts grow to limit corporate dental ownership, protect dentist autonomy: 6 updates
- What’s the deal with insurer mental health parity violations?
- Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable
- Wider care gaps predicted as mental health parity rule faces rollback
- Sheppard Pratt gets $16.5M for behavioral health expansion
- Former Deputy Surgeon General Erica Schwartz, M.D., nominated as CDC director
- Verily Health simplifies medical jargon alphabet soup with AI-powered app in new campaign
- 10 trends in behavioral health usage: Report
- Cattywampus: Statement on the CAT Concept Release
- Providers' advantage on out-of-network billing disputes likely to continue: Capstone
- Butterflies and Condors: Remarks at the Options Market Roundtable
- Viatris, Teva kick off separate recalls over dissolution, raw material issues
- Mental health ED visits at Children’s Hospital Colorado jump 20% in April
- Rising ACA Costs Leave Many Unable To Pay for Coverage
- One Lot of Xanax Recalled Nationwide Over Quality Issue, FDA Says
- Cough Drops From Several Brands Being Recalled, FDA Says
- CDC May Get New Leader as Officials Consider Erica Schwartz
- Statement at the Roundtable on Options
- Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable
- APA launches resource library for trusted digital mental health tools
- E-Bikes And E-Scooters A Growing Menace On City Streets, Study Says
- 'Absent or trivial' effects: Anti-amyloid Alzheimer's drugs called into question once again
- RFK Jr. kicks off string of congressional hearings to talk White House budget plan
- This Simple Step Could Improve The Benefits From Your Regular Workouts
- New Alzheimer's Drugs Provide No Meaningful Benefit, Major Evidence Review Concludes
- Air Pollution and Weather Tied to Migraines
- Study Says Stress, Weight And Hormones Alter Timing of Puberty in Girls
- Why Walking Remains Unsteady After Partial Spinal Cord Injury
- Roche to launch another Elevidys study after EU rejection of Duchenne gene therapy
- Lilly answers FDA's call for more Foundayo safety info, plotting diabetes filing in parallel
- New Federal Medicaid Rules Require One Month of Work. Some States Demand More.
- As US Birth Rate Falls, Feds’ Response May Make Pregnancy More Dangerous
- Omnicom brews Olixir from FCB Health, rebranding storied agency after Interpublic takeover
- DiMe-led initiative brings together pharma, virtual providers, digital pharmacies to develop blueprint for DTC pharma models
- UPDATED: Heeding RFK Jr.'s call, FDA reclassifies 12 unapproved peptides ahead of advisory committee meeting
- Carrot launches proprietary AI platform for personalized fertility, family care
- UC Health workers plan open-ended, system-wide strike for May 14
- Baylor Scott & White Health Plan to depart individual market, Medicaid this year
- In industry's latest OTC pivot, Daiichi Sankyo lines up $1.5B consumer health unit sale to beverage giant Suntory
- Wildlife Trade Tied To Higher Risk of Diseases Spreading to Humans
- EPA Delays Decisions on 'Forever Chemicals'
- Yes, This is the Worst Pollen Season Ever — Until Next Year
- GoodRx launches 7.2-mg Wegovy dose for self-pay patients at $399 per month
- Providers back bipartisan bill eliminating Medicare chronic care management cost sharing
- Progyny unveils new fertility benefit option for small, mid-size employers
- New Weight Loss Pill, Foundayo, Gets Approval But FDA Seeks More Safety Data
- Seqster launches new data tool to turn clinical sites into 'research-ready data collection points'
- Gilead widens global Yeztugo access agreement, but MSF says supply is 'not nearly enough'
- Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan joins Anthropic’s board as biopharma’s ties to AI deepen
- Behavioral health utilization is up with anxiety disorders leading demand, report finds
- Does Your Child Have A Concussion? These Are The Signs, Review Says
- AI Reveals Negative Labels in Medical Records for Sickle Cell Patients
- 'Food-as-Medicine' Improves Life for Heart Failure Patients
- Silent Heart Rhythm Problem Might Triple Risk Of Heart Failure In Seniors
- Blood Test Predicts Alzheimer's Years Before Symptoms, Brain Changes
- An Infectious Combo Triples Risk Of MS, Study Says
- Astellas manufacturing chief views reliable supply, bridging research as his production 'north star'
- Physician compensation up 3% in 2025, but not all specialties saw raises: Medscape
- Pfizer recruits former Angel Lucy Liu for latest mission against cancer
- Teva launches new online schizophrenia community project
- One man’s journey from gambling addiction to recovery and advocacy
- Rural Nebraska Dialysis Unit Closes Despite the State’s $219M in Rural Health Funding
- Medi-Cal Immigrant Enrollment Is Dropping. Researchers Point to Trump’s Policies.
- Ionis exec shares method to the Madness after 2026 Drug Name Tournament win
- Abridge expands clinical decision support solution with UpToDate partnership, new NEJM, JAMA content tie-ups
- Travere maps course for Filspari's $3B US opportunity after landmark rare disease nod
- Hospitals with more disadvantaged patients fall short on price transparency, study finds
- FDA tells Eli Lilly to round up more safety info on key obesity launch Foundayo
- Meat Consumption Rises as Protein Trend Grows, Experts Warn
- Bill would force payers to apply DTC drug purchases to patient deductibles
- Nuts.com Recalls 10,000+ Pounds of Candy Over Allergy Risk
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- Keebler Health secures $16M in series A funding for AI-powered risk adjustment platform
- Sam’s Club Recalls Children’s Pajamas Due to Fire Hazard
- Small Talk? It May Be Better Than You Think
- J&J, chasing $100B year, sports immunology ‘dual powerhouse’ of Tremfya and new launch Icotyde
- Long-Term Opioid Prescriptions Fall By About A Quarter
- Gut Bacteria Might Drive Rare Food Allergy in Children, Study Finds
- Stents Can Ease Long-Term Symptoms Of Deep Vein Thrombosis, Trial Shows
- Young Cancer Survivors Face Doubled Risk Of Subsequent New Cancer
- Novo taps OpenAI to deploy AI across R&D, manufacturing and corporate functions
- Pfizer rebuked by FDA for misleading Adcetris ads on Facebook
- FDA Reminds More Than 2,200 Sponsors and Researchers to Disclose Trial Results
- FDA Reminds More Than 2,200 Sponsors and Researchers to Disclose Trial Results
- Freedom of Associations
- Interfacing with our Inner Demons: Comments on the Division of Trading and Markets' Statement on Certain User Interfaces
- Staff Statement Regarding Broker-Dealer Registration of Certain User Interfaces Utilized to Prepare Transactions in Crypto Asset Securities
- Statement Regarding Staff No-Action Letter to Bank of England
Woven through the right to life are economics and practical human nature.
Catherine R. Pakaluk / @CRPakaluk / May 19, 2023Government-paid “free” births for all won’t reduce abortions. Like other forms of socialism, it has serious flaws. The big three: It’s not free, it won’t work, and it’s unjust. Pictured: Newborn babies sleeping in a hospital nursery. (Photo: ER Productions Limited, DigitalVision/Getty Images)
Though most Americans have childbirth covered through private health insurance or Medicaid, Americans United for Life proposes a program to compensate hospitals directly from a national fund for any birth, at any time, under any conditions. This proposal, however well-intentioned, would socialize the costs of childbirth. The government would cover the good things that marriage and the family are meant to provide directly.
This plan might seem like mission creep for an organization focused on ending abortion. But it argues that it would not only help families but also reduce the number of abortions. Such a plan, it says, will signal our national dedication to life and encourage a “thriving future for the next generation.”
But this kind of plan concedes that “it takes a village” to have a baby—or at least endorses that it should take a village. Like other forms of socialism, however, this proposal has serious flaws. Here are the three big ones: It’s not free, it won’t work, and it’s unjust.
It’s Not Free
First, the language itself is misleading at best. There’s no free lunch. You can’t make scarce, valuable things “free.” You can only try to make someone else pay for it.
Childbirth in the United States today generally involves, at a minimum, an at-home midwife. And in many cases, it includes doctors, hospitals, and even surgery. These are costly goods and services. A more competitive market could reduce these costs to mothers who need them. But they can never be free.
It Won’t Work
Second, it won’t work, because when you think you have roped someone else into paying for a thing, the thing itself changes. Take K-12 public education, which has been “free” for a century. It has now morphed into babysitting with a cocktail of cultural indoctrination. Most people with an exit opt out. Entire schools in major cities have no students proficient in reading or math.
In proposing to “make birth free,” Americans United for Life is ignoring such obvious problems. The organization blithely suggests that a universal government-administered, Medicaid-style program will “address disconnects in the marketplace,” and “improve … outcomes while simultaneously reducing the price of childbirth.” But it hasn’t worked in education—or in medicine.
There are many reasons why, but the most salient one is this: The recipient of a service is in the best position to judge whether the service is worth paying for. A third-party payer is essentially blind to the quality of a service, but not to its costs.
So, cost-cutting that reduces the value of the service to the recipient will always win the day, eroding the race-to-the-top improvements provided by competitive markets.
Economists have recently estimated that physicians lose 18% of Medicaid revenue to billing problems, compared with only a 2.4% loss when billing commercial insurers. The expectation of this shortfall depresses doctors’ willingness to supply care to Medicaid patients. Common sense suggests that only doctors with poor reviews and lower demand will find it worthwhile to keep servicing Medicaid patients.
Do we really want to expand such poor service to every expectant mother?
It’s Unjust
Third, “make birth free” is an unjust wealth transfer. Making birth free is a $68 billion program. Its proponents say that we shouldn’t balk at the price tag since it’s about the same amount that the United States voted to give to Ukraine in aid. We throw that kind of money around all the time, they say! But two (or two trillion) wrongs don’t make a right.
At over 120% debt-to-GDP ratio, rising nominal interest rates, and growing instability in the banking sector, we have the variables in place for the type of crisis that crippled Latin America in the 1980s. The United States should not count itself immune from financial tragedy just because we’ve avoided it so far.
Wealth transfers without strings from married families with children to unmarried, fractured households through our current welfare system are probably unjust to begin with. And broken families are best served materially and spiritually by churches and charities, not government. But wealth transfers engineered by a bankrupt state to be paid for by the next generation are even more profoundly unjust.
We can assume the best intentions of our pro-life friends who propose to make birth free. But good intentions don’t necessarily shape the results of a good policy. Growing the entitlement state by taxing our children tomorrow to pay for today’s wealth transfers is not a sound approach to building “a thriving future for the next generation.”
But Would It Reduce Abortions?
Americans United for Life also argues that providing free births will prevent abortions. But the women at highest risk for abortion are already eligible for “free birth” through Medicaid. Half of all abortions are obtained by women in poverty, with another quarter by women close to poverty. If “free birth” doesn’t prevent abortion among poor women now, why would it be a game-changer to expand that coverage to everyone else? Forty-two percent of all births are already eligible for Medicaid.
Americans United for Life is making a common mistake of the Left. It supposes that a failed policy will succeed if only we expand it and spend more money on it.
Note that poor women (many without private insurance) are not more likely per pregnancy to abort than other groups. In fact, they’re considerably less likely to abort than wealthy women and upper-middle-class women when facing an unplanned pregnancy. The reason they make up such a high proportion of abortions is that they are two to three times as likely to get pregnant over the course of a year than wealthier women. Obviously, then, the high price of birth isn’t driving abortion rates.
And here’s something else the high price of birth isn’t driving: low birth rates, contrary to the organization’s assertion. The correlation between income and birth rate is one of the most robust domestic and international correlations on record. The more income people (and nations) have, the fewer births they tend to have. Vastly more important reasons for falling birth rates are reduced religious practice and people waiting longer to get married.
If Americans United for Life’s claim made sense, we should see high birth rates in places like Canada, Japan, Norway, and the U.K., or in any of the other 17 countries offering single-payer health care with “free” birth for all. On the contrary, these countries register the lowest birth rates ever recorded in human history, along with Italy, Spain, and Slovenia.
https://www.dailysignal.com/2023/05/19/why-government-paid-free-births-wont-reduce-abortions/
COMMENTARY BY
Catherine R. Pakaluk@CRPakaluk
Catherine R. Pakaluk, Ph.D., is associate professor of social research and economic thought at The Catholic University of America and a visiting fellow in the Simon Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.















