S-2943-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Tammy Duckworth (D-IL)
What it does
This bill would amend Title 38 of the U.S. Code to require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to allow enrolled veterans to fill contraceptive prescriptions — including pills, transdermal patches, vaginal rings, and other FDA-approved contraceptive products — as a full 12-month supply at one time. It would also require VA medical providers to notify veterans of this option when prescribing any covered contraceptive product.
Who benefits
Veterans enrolled in the VA healthcare system who use hormonal or other prescription contraceptives — primarily women veterans, though some transgender and nonbinary veterans may also benefit. Veterans in rural or remote areas who face logistical barriers to frequent pharmacy visits would see the largest practical benefit. Veterans with limited transportation, demanding work schedules, or deployment-related disruptions to routine healthcare access would also benefit. VA pharmacies that could consolidate dispensing volume may see modest administrative efficiencies.
Who is hurt
VA pharmacy supply and budget managers may face increased upfront dispensing costs and inventory demands, as a full-year supply requires larger stock on hand. Veterans who experience side effects or need to switch contraceptive methods mid-year could end up with unused medication. Taxpayers could bear modestly higher costs if the VA absorbs the expense of dispensing larger quantities at once. Private-sector pharmacies that currently fill VA prescriptions on a monthly basis may see reduced transaction volume.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that dispensing contraceptives in 30-day increments creates unnecessary barriers for veterans, particularly the roughly 2 million women veterans who use VA healthcare, many of whom live in rural areas far from VA facilities. They contend that research — including a 2019 study in Obstetrics & Gynecology — shows that 12-month contraceptive supplies reduce unintended pregnancy rates and improve medication adherence compared to shorter supplies, and that over 30 states have already enacted similar requirements for civilian insurers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a full-year supply increases the risk of medication waste and added cost when veterans switch methods, experience adverse effects, or become pregnant, since unused dispensed medication typically cannot be returned or redistributed. They contend that the VA already faces significant pharmacy budget pressures and that this mandate could divert resources from other veteran healthcare needs without a clear cost-benefit analysis or CBO score to guide implementation decisions.