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Committee advances bill to expand Medicaid coverage for lactation care, add voluntary state certification

Committee on Appropriations (Arizona State Senate) · March 24, 2026

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Summary

The committee gave House Bill 2051 a due‑pass recommendation after testimony from clinicians and advocates that Medicaid coverage of lactation services and a voluntary state certification for lactation care providers would improve maternal and infant outcomes; fiscal estimate shows an estimated $1.8 million state cost contingent on CMS approval.

The Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday advanced House Bill 2051, which would require AHCCCS contractors, subject to U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approval, to cover breastfeeding and lactation‑care services and create an optional state certification for lactation care providers under the Arizona Department of Health Services.

Sponsor (speaker 14) explained a 15‑page amendment that establishes the voluntary certification, sets application and discipline standards, and creates a community advisory committee to assist ADHS in implementation. Clinicians and advocates including an international board‑certified lactation consultant and academic researchers testified that expanded access reduces infant infections, NICU stays and maternal complications and can yield near‑term Medicaid savings.

AHCCCS (Steve Berg, speaker 21) said the agency is neutral and noted that coverage is contingent on CMS approval; AHCCCS’s finance staff estimated a state cost of approximately $1.8 million general fund. ADHS legislative liaison (Carly, speaker 22) said the department is developing a fiscal estimate and that implementing the certification would require resources the agency cannot absorb without additional funding.

Committee members spoke in favor, noting health benefits and equity concerns; several members explained their votes. The committee adopted the Farnsworth amendment and voted 9–0 (with 1 not voting) to give the bill, as amended, a due‑pass recommendation.

What happens next: The bill will go to the Senate floor for further consideration and may require a state‑plan amendment and CMS approval before coverage becomes effective.