Fewer women aged 20-44 years are using sterilization as their primary method of contraception, despite no-cost coverage of the procedure under the Affordable Care Act.
Sterilization rates in 2011-2013 for women in this age group was 25%, down from 27% in 2002, according to a new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Rates declined across income groups, dropping from 41% in 2002 to 37% in 2011-2013 for women whose incomes were up to 149% of the federal poverty level (FPL). For women with incomes within 150%-299% of the FPL, the rate declined from 33% to 28%, and for those at 300% or more of the FPL, the rate declined from 20% to 18%, according to the report.
While expanded coverage under the ACA may, in the long run, lead to greater use of sterilization by women, “it remains to be seen whether the growing availability of [long-acting reversible contraception] will offset this as IUDs and implants serve as semi-permanent substitutes for sterilization,” the Kaiser researchers wrote.
From 2011 to 2013, about 5% of men aged 15-44 years reported undergoing a vasectomy, according to Kaiser. The ACA does not require health plans to cover sterilization for men, but two states – Vermont and Maryland – have passed laws requiring coverage within their borders in the future.
Male sterilization rates increased with age (1% of those aged 15-34 years, compared with 13% of those aged 35-44 years), income (3% for those below 200% of the FPL, 5% for those 200%-399%, and 10% for those above 400%), and education (3% of those with up to a high school diploma/GED, 5% of those with some college, and 13% of those with at least a 4-year college degree). Comparative changes in male sterilization rates were not provided.