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Postpartum extension Massachusetts · MassHealth

12-month postpartum Medicaid in Massachusetts

The number

MassHealth extended postpartum Medicaid coverage to 12 months, effective 2022-04-01.

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What the 12-month postpartum extension covers

MassHealth has extended postpartum Medicaid coverage from the federal minimum of 60 days to 12 months. The extension took effect 2022-04-01 and was authorized under Section 9812 of the American Rescue Plan Act (2021), which allowed states to make the extension permanent through a State Plan Amendment.

What the extension covers: the same Medicaid benefits you had during pregnancy — primary care, specialty care including cardiology and behavioral health, prescription drugs, dental, vision, and transportation to appointments. Crucially, it covers screening and treatment for the leading causes of late-postpartum death: cardiovascular and cardiomyopathy events (roughly a third of US pregnancy-related deaths), mental-health and substance-use conditions, and infections.

What you need to do to keep coverage: generally nothing during the 12 months — MassHealth is required to provide continuous eligibility. At the end of the 12-month window, the state will check whether you still qualify under another Medicaid category (expansion adult, parent, disability-based). If you no longer qualify for Medicaid, you will be referred to the health insurance marketplace for ACA subsidies with a special enrollment period triggered by loss of Medicaid.

Massachusetts' 2006 Chapter 58 law was the template for the Affordable Care Act; MassHealth now covers roughly one-third of the state's population. The doula benefit (reimbursement up to $1,548 per package) launched December 2024 under the 2022 Maternal Health Omnibus (S.2996).

For Black families

The 12-month postpartum extension is especially important for Black birthing people: CDC data show roughly a third of Black pregnancy-related deaths occur between 43 days and 1 year postpartum, exactly the window the 60-day cutoff used to exclude. Massachusetts' 2006 Chapter 58 law was the template for the Affordable Care Act; MassHealth now covers roughly one-third of the state's population. The doula benefit (reimbursement up to $1,548 per package) launched December 2024 under the 2022 Maternal Health Omnibus (S.2996).

Where to get help in Massachusetts

  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in Massachusetts: every FQHC accepts Medicaid, charges on a sliding scale for the uninsured, and has certified application counselors who can help you apply or renew. See our FQHC directory for this state at /clinics/ma/.
  • Medicaid-accepting providers in Massachusetts: our provider directory lets you filter to providers in this state. See /providers/ma/.
  • State health profile for Massachusetts: for state-level health outcomes context (maternal mortality, infant mortality, life expectancy, uninsured rate) by race, see /health/massachusetts/.
  • MassHealth consumer help line: 1-800-841-2900 for application help, renewal questions, and general Medicaid inquiries. Ask for an interpreter if you need one; language access is required under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
  • Black Mamas Matter Alliance maintains a national directory of Black perinatal organizations at blackmamasmatter.org. Filter to programs serving Massachusetts.
  • National Health Law Program (NHeLP) doula tracker: up-to-date Medicaid doula coverage map at healthlaw.org/doulamedicaidproject.

References & primary sources

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