HR-4381-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Terri Sewell (D-AL)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Defense to launch a five-year pilot program treating pregnancy as a "qualifying life event" that allows eligible TRICARE beneficiaries to enroll in TRICARE Select outside of normal open enrollment periods. The Secretary would be required to start the program within 180 days of enactment. The bill also requires an initial congressional briefing within one year and annual reports tracking enrollment changes by category — including whether changes were driven by active duty status shifts or by the new pregnancy provision.
Who benefits
Pregnant servicemembers and their dependents who are currently enrolled in a different TRICARE plan and wish to switch to TRICARE Select mid-year. Spouses and family members of servicemembers who become pregnant and want access to TRICARE Select's broader provider network. Military families who may prefer TRICARE Select's fee-for-service structure over other TRICARE options for prenatal and obstetric care. Healthcare providers in TRICARE Select's network who may see increased patient volume.
Who is hurt
TRICARE managed care plans (such as TRICARE Prime) could see enrollment reductions if pregnant beneficiaries switch away mid-year, potentially disrupting per-member payment calculations. Taxpayers and the Defense Health Program budget may face modestly higher costs if TRICARE Select — which generally has higher government cost-sharing than managed care options — sees increased enrollment. Beneficiaries who remain in other TRICARE plans could face indirect cost pressures if risk pools shift. The pilot program also imposes administrative and reporting burdens on the Department of Defense.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that pregnancy is a major, time-sensitive health event that creates immediate and specific medical needs, yet current TRICARE enrollment rules can trap beneficiaries in plans that may not best serve prenatal care. They contend that allowing mid-year enrollment changes for pregnancy — consistent with how private-sector insurance treats pregnancy under ACA qualifying event rules — would improve health outcomes for military families at a critical time, and that the five-year pilot structure ensures data-driven evaluation before any permanent policy change.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that allowing mid-year enrollment switches based on pregnancy could destabilize TRICARE plan risk pools, as healthier beneficiaries remain in lower-cost plans while those with high near-term medical needs migrate to TRICARE Select, potentially driving up costs across the Defense Health Program. They contend that the existing TRICARE system already provides comprehensive prenatal coverage regardless of plan type, making the added administrative complexity and potential cost increases difficult to justify, and that the pilot's reporting requirements place a real burden on DoD without a guaranteed path to measurable improvement.