Trump administration cancels teen pregnancy grants
The Trump administration canceled nearly all federal grants to prevent teen pregnancies, leaving only two programs funded. This risks reversing progress in reducing teen pregnancy rates, especially in
The Trump administration has canceled nearly all federal grants aimed at preventing teen pregnancies, leaving just two programs still funded out of do
Read Full Story at NPR Health โWhy This Matters
The Trump administrationโs decision to strip nearly all federal funding for teen pregnancy prevention programs isnโt just a budgetary shiftโitโs a reversal of two decades of evidence-based public health progress. The programs canceled were among the most rigorously studied interventions in the U.S., with documented success in delaying sexual activity and increasing contraceptive use. Without them, vulnerable communities may face a resurgence of preventable pregnancies, exacerbating cycles of poverty and inequality.
Background Context
Teen pregnancy rates in the U.S. have declined by over 60% since the 1990s, thanks in part to federally funded initiatives like the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program (TPPP), created in 2010 under the Affordable Care Act. Many of these grants supported community-based organizations that tailored education and access to contraception to high-risk populations, from rural areas to urban neighborhoods. The Trump-era cuts reflect a broader ideological pivot away from comprehensive sex education, favoring abstinence-only approaches despite their lack of proven efficacy.
What Happens Next
States and local governments will now scramble to fill the funding gap, but disparities in resources mean rural and low-income communities will likely bear the brunt of the cuts. Nonprofits and research institutions previously funded through these grants may shutter programs or pivot to less effective models. Watch for legal challenges from advocacy groups, as well as a potential rise in teen pregnancy rates in the coming yearsโa lagging indicator that could take time to surface but will be difficult to reverse.
Bigger Picture
This move aligns with a broader trend of federal retreat from social welfare programs, prioritizing ideological consistency over measurable public health outcomes. It also underscores how political cycles can disrupt long-term investments in prevention, even when such programs yield measurable returns. The shift risks undermining broader efforts to reduce maternal mortality and economic disparities, proving that progress in public health is as fragile as the funding mechanisms that support it.


