Maine network ends primary care after losing Medicaid due to Trump
defunding Planned Parenthood
[October 31, 2025]
By PATRICK WHITTLE
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — A network of medical clinics that serves
low-income residents in Maine said it will shut down its primary care
operations on Friday because of Trump administration cuts to abortion
providers.
Maine Family Planning operates 18 clinics in the state and says
abortions are a relatively small percentage of its overall services,
which also include cancer screenings, sexually transmitted disease
testing and contraception. The network said it had to cut primary care
because of the administration's move to block Medicaid money from
abortion providers including the much larger Planned Parenthood.
The move to defund abortion providers is driving patients away from
their doctors in Maine, said George Hill, president of Maine Family
Planning. The network saw more than 600 patients in its primary care
practices last year, Hill said.
“Telling those patients we can’t see them anymore has been devastating,
especially knowing that some of them will find it too difficult to get a
new provider and may just forego care,” Hill said.
Maine Family Planning serves many of the poor and rural areas of the
state and typically receives about $1.9 million in Medicaid
reimbursements per year, the network said in a statement. The network
said it notified its patients of the coming primary care closures about
a month ago. The network has about 8,000 patients in total.
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Vanessa Shields-Haas, a nurse practitioner, walks from the lobby
toward the examination rooms at the Maine Family Planning healthcare
facility, July 15, 2025, in Thomaston, Maine. (AP Photo/Charles
Krupa, File)

Maine Family Planning fought the halting of Medicaid dollars in federal
court, but it suffered a setback in August when a federal judge ruled
against restoring funding during the network’s ongoing lawsuit against
the Trump administration. The network appealed to a higher court, and
that legal fight is still ongoing.
The Center for Reproductive Rights filed the case in federal court on
behalf of the network, and said Friday it will continue to fight to
restore the funding. Nancy Northup, president of the Center for
Reproductive Rights, called the loss of funding for Maine Family
Planning “part of a larger strategy to shut down clinics even in states
like Maine that protect the right to abortion.”
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