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Wisconsin extends postpartum Medicaid coverage to one year
Summary
Gov. Tony Evers signed Senate Bill 23 (2025 Wisconsin Act 102) to extend postpartum Medicaid coverage in Wisconsin from 60 days to 12 months, and the state is now the 49th to adopt such an extension.
Content
Governor Tony Evers has signed Senate Bill 23 (2025 Wisconsin Act 102), extending postpartum Medicaid coverage in Wisconsin from 60 days to 12 months after birth. He shared a video of the signing on X and said the change fulfills a long-standing proposal he first raised in 2019. The measure is part of Evers' Healthy Meals, Healthy Babies initiative and reflects his repeated inclusion of the extension in executive budgets. After the signing, the governor plans to travel across the state for community conversations about maternal health.
Key details:
- The bill signed is Senate Bill 23, recorded as 2025 Wisconsin Act 102.
- Postpartum Medicaid coverage is extended from 60 days to 12 months after giving birth.
- Evers posted a video of the signing on X and said he first proposed the extension in 2019 and has included it in subsequent budgets.
- Wisconsin is reported to be the 49th state to extend postpartum Medicaid coverage, according to Wisconsin Public Radio.
- Lawmakers from both parties offered praise on the floor; Rep. Robyn Vining said the expansion will prevent preventable deaths and provide needed health and mental health care, and Rep. Barbara Dittrich said the bill makes sense.
- The governor will hold community meetings with local moms, families, and leaders to discuss maternal health disparities and resources.
Summary:
The law extends postpartum Medicaid coverage to 12 months and represents a policy change intended to broaden postpartum care access for mothers covered by Medicaid. Wisconsin joins other states in adopting a one-year postpartum coverage standard. The governor plans to engage communities statewide to discuss maternal health and support needs. Timing and specific implementation details were not stated.
