| Literature DB >> 3817122 |
Abstract
In FY 1985, the federal and state governments spent $398 million to provide contraceptive services and supplies. The two leading sources of funding were the Medicaid program and Title X of the Public Health Service Act. The former accounted for $137 million, or 34 percent of all public expenditures; and the latter program accounted for $133 million, also 34 percent. Two blockgrant programs--Social Services and Maternal and child Health--provided $40 million and $23 million, respectively; together, they were responsible for 16 percent of public support for contraceptive services. State governments, which spent $64 million of their own revenues, accounted for another 16 percent of funding. The federal and state governments together spent $64 million to subsidize sterilizations in FY 1985. The federal government provided 94 percent of the funding--84 percent through the Medicaid program. In addition, the states and the federal government spent $66 million to subsidize 188,000 abortions; in this case, however, the federal government contributed less than one percent of the funds used. These data come from a survey of state agencies, and should be viewed as approximations rather than as precise figures.Entities:
Keywords: Abortion, Induced; Abortion, Legal; Americas; Developed Countries; Developing Countries; Economic Factors; Expenditures; Family Planning; Family Planning Programs; Fertility Control, Postconception; Financial Activities; Financing, Government; Medical Assistance, Title 19; North America; Northern America; Public Assistance; Research Report; Sterilization, Sexual; United States
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3817122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Plann Perspect ISSN: 0014-7354