Medicaid doula coverage in Oregon
The number
Oregon Health Plan covers doula services at up to $1,500 per full perinatal package, effective 2014-01-01.
What the doula benefit looks like in practice
Oregon Health Plan covers doula services for pregnant and postpartum enrollees. Reimbursement is up to $1,500 per full perinatal package, covering prenatal visits, labor support, and postpartum visits. Coverage took effect 2014-01-01.
How a doula enrolls as a Medicaid provider: the state requires credentialing through one of the recognized doula certifying bodies (DONA International, NBDA, Commonsense Childbirth / MDoula, or a state-approved equivalent), a fingerprint-based background check, an NPI number, and enrollment as a non-physician practitioner with the state Medicaid MMIS. Most states also require 'completion of a state-approved training covering cultural humility and the state's Medicaid billing rules.'
How a pregnant enrollee finds a covered doula: the state Medicaid portal publishes a searchable directory of enrolled doulas. If you are in managed care, your plan may publish its own network list. Community-based organizations — especially those serving Black pregnant people — maintain referral lists outside the state portal that often surface doulas not yet on the state directory.
Oregon was the second state to add Medicaid doula coverage (January 2014) and the first to run its Medicaid program through Coordinated Care Organizations (CCOs). HB 2185 (2023) raised doula reimbursement from $350 to $1,500 per full perinatal package. Oregon Doula Association and Oregon Tradeswomen support workforce development.
For Black families
For Black pregnant people, a Medicaid-covered doula removes the cost barrier that has made doula care an out-of-pocket privilege. National studies (Thomas et al., AJPH 2017; Kozhimannil et al., Birth 2016) find Black people who work with a doula have lower preterm birth and lower c-section rates and report higher satisfaction with care. Oregon was the second state to add Medicaid doula coverage (January 2014) and the first to run its Medicaid program through Coordinated Care Organizations (CCOs). HB 2185 (2023) raised doula reimbursement from $350 to $1,500 per full perinatal package. Oregon Doula Association and Oregon Tradeswomen support workforce development.
Where to get help in Oregon
- Federally Qualified Health Centers in Oregon: 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/or/.
- Medicaid-accepting providers in Oregon: our provider directory lets you filter to providers in this state. See /providers/or/.
- State health profile for Oregon: for state-level health outcomes context (maternal mortality, infant mortality, life expectancy, uninsured rate) by race, see /health/oregon/.
- Oregon Health Plan consumer help line: 1-800-699-9075 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 Oregon.
- National Health Law Program (NHeLP) doula tracker: up-to-date Medicaid doula coverage map at healthlaw.org/doulamedicaidproject.
References & primary sources
- Oregon Health Plan, state Medicaid portal: https://www.oregon.gov/oha/hsd/ohp/Pages/index.aspx.
- KFF State Health Facts: kff.org/statedata. Medicaid income eligibility + enrollment.
- Medicaid.gov: medicaid.gov. Federal program guidance + state plan amendments.
- National Health Law Program doula tracker: healthlaw.org/doulamedicaidproject.
Data refreshed: