Title X program
Coverage of Title X program in the Nexus archive.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which traditionally provided contraception access, to emphasize childbearing and family formation. The new guidelines prioritize natural methods for avoiding pregnancy and addressing infertility, potentially harming low-income and minority women reliant on the program.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which traditionally provided access to contraception, toward an emphasis on childbearing and family formation. The new guidelines prioritize natural methods to avoid pregnancy and promote fertility education, while prohibiting DEI efforts and linking to immigration restrictions. Health policy researchers warn this will disproportionately harm low-income and minority women reliant on Title X services.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which traditionally provided contraception access, to emphasize childbearing and family formation. New guidelines prioritize natural pregnancy prevention methods, infertility treatments, and 'body literacy education,' while prohibiting DEI efforts and linking funding to reduced immigration facilitation. Critics argue the changes will disproportionately harm low-income and minority women.
- Trump overhauls federal birth control program to promote ‘family formation,’ fertility awareness
The Trump administration is overhauling the federal Title X program, shifting its focus from contraception to promoting family formation and fertility awareness. The new guidelines prioritize natural methods to prevent pregnancy and address infertility, while prohibiting DEI efforts and linking funding to immigration policies. Health policy researchers warn the changes may disproportionately harm low-income and minority women.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which traditionally provided access to contraception, toward promoting childbearing and family formation. New guidelines prioritize natural pregnancy prevention methods and address infertility, while prohibiting DEI efforts and linking funding to anti-immigration policies. Critics argue the changes will disproportionately harm low-income and minority women reliant on Title X services.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which provides contraception access, to emphasize family formation and healthy pregnancies. The change prioritizes natural pregnancy methods and opposes abortion, with critics arguing it will harm low-income and minority women reliant on the program.
- Trump changes pregnancy-prevention program to promote childbearing
The Trump administration is shifting the federal Title X program, which provides reproductive health services, to prioritize promoting childbearing and family formation over contraception access. New guidelines emphasize natural pregnancy prevention methods, fertility education, and aligning with efforts to boost the U.S. birth rate, while prohibiting DEI initiatives and linking funding to immigration restrictions. Critics argue the changes will disproportionately harm low-income and minority women.
- As U.S. birth rate falls, Trump officials downplay contraception in Title X program
U.S. birth rates declined by 1% in 2025 compared to 2024, with a 23% drop since 2007, according to CDC data. The Trump administration has expressed a desire to reverse this trend, despite downplaying contraception in the Title X program.
- Trump administration shifts focus of Title X program away from birth control
The Trump administration is altering the focus of the Title X family planning program to reduce emphasis on birth control. The article references birth control pills displayed in Philadelphia in 2022 as context.