What Is Actually Changing
If you have UnitedHealthcare and a new baby (or one on the way), this affects you.
On September 1, 2026, UnitedHealthcare is planning to change how it pays for lactation support — the help you receive from a lactation consultant when feeding isn't going the way you hoped. The change would make that help harder to get, and in some cases, make it impossible.
Starting September 1, UnitedHealthcare says it will:
- Stop paying when a lactation visit is billed for the baby. It will only pay when the visit is billed for the mother.
- Pay for just one session per day.
Right now, lactation support is covered as preventive care, which under the Affordable Care Act is supposed to be available to you without extra cost. This policy change puts that protection at serious risk.
A Lactation Visit Is Care for Two Patients
Here is why this policy does not reflect clinical reality. A lactation visit is care for two people at once: you and your baby. Your lactation consultant weighs your baby, watches your baby feed, and assesses the things that affect feeding: latch, oral function, weight gain, swallowing, body tension, and more. Without seeing your baby, a complete clinical picture of how breastfeeding is going simply cannot be obtained.
Refusing to pay for the baby's portion of the visit means your family receives half the care — while your monthly premiums stay exactly the same.
Who Gets Hit the Hardest
Families where only the baby is covered by UnitedHealthcare — for example, when a parent is on a different or out-of-network plan — will be hit the hardest. For these families, UHC refusing to pay for the baby's visit could mean no covered lactation help at all.
Skilled lactation support in the first weeks after birth prevents real, serious, expensive problems: babies who aren't gaining weight, dehydration, jaundice, painful infections, and emergency room visits for both of you. It is low-cost care that prevents high-cost crises. Cutting it does not save money — it moves the cost onto families and takes away help when you are at your most exhausted and most vulnerable.
You are entitled to this care. This policy is not yet final. And your voice matters.
What You Can Do — It Takes About 15 Minutes
Pick whichever actions work for you. Doing more than one is even better. Each one sends a signal, and companies respond when enough people push back through enough channels.
💼 Contact Your Employer
If you get UnitedHealthcare through your job, your employer is often the actual decision-maker. Many workplace plans are "self-funded," meaning your employer pays the claims and simply hires UHC to administer them. In those plans, your employer can push back on UHC directly — and HR departments listen to employees. A short email to your HR or benefits team can make a real difference.
⬇ Download Employer Letter Template📞 Call UnitedHealthcare Directly
Call the member services number on the back of your insurance card. Tell them you oppose this change. Use your own words — let them know that your lactation consultant evaluates you and your baby at every visit, and that removing coverage for your baby increases your costs without lowering your premiums.
🏛️ Write Your Elected Officials
Elected officials pay close attention to stories from the people they represent. They can open inquiries and apply pressure on the agencies that oversee insurance. Two or three honest sentences about your own experience carry more weight than any form letter.
Find your representatives:
- usa.gov/elected-officials — find all federal and state officials by address
- congress.gov — Find Your Member of Congress
⬇ Download Elected Officials Letter Template
📋 File a Complaint with Your State's Department of Insurance
Your state has a Department of Insurance whose job is to make sure insurers follow the law — including the ACA's requirement to cover preventive care. You do not have to be an expert to file. Have your UnitedHealthcare member ID handy. Most states have an online form you can paste your letter into.
- Find your state's Department of Insurance → naic.org
- Connecticut: Connecticut Insurance Department — File a Complaint
- New York: NY Department of Financial Services — File a Complaint
⬇ Download Insurance Regulator Letter Template
Copy-and-Paste Letter Templates
Fill in the bracketed sections with your own details. The parts marked "in your own words" matter most — two or three honest sentences about your experience will do more than any polished template.
📰 Letter to Local News Media
Subject line: STORY TIP: Local Families Losing Infant Lactation Coverage Under UnitedHealthcare — September 1 Deadline🗳️ Letter to Your State Representative or Senator
Subject line: Please Protect Lactation Coverage for Infants Under UnitedHealthcare📋 Letter to Your State Department of Insurance
Subject line: Formal Complaint — UnitedHealthcare Proposed Policy Change Affecting Lactation CoverageMedia Contacts — Tip These Outlets Directly
News coverage creates public pressure. The more stories get filed, the harder this policy is for UHC to ignore. If you are comfortable sharing your story, these outlets cover exactly this kind of issue.
National Health & Policy Media
| Outlet | Contact | Why It's a Fit |
|---|---|---|
| KFF Health News | NewsTips@kff.org | Nation's #1 health policy newsroom. This story is exactly their beat. |
| NPR / "Bill of the Month" | Submit via form | Investigates real-world insurance billing harms. Perfect fit. |
| NBC News National | tips@nbcuni.com | National health coverage; consumer impact stories. |
| New York Times | metro@nytimes.com | Health policy, insurance, and ACA coverage. |
| New York Post | tips@nypost.com | Known for consumer outrage and insurance stories. |
| New York Daily News | news@nydailynews.com | Consumer advocacy coverage; family-focused stories. |
| Wall Street Journal | nywireroom@dowjones.com | Extensive insurance industry coverage. |
New York City Local News
| Outlet | Contact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ABC7 / 7 On Your Side Investigates | 7OnYourSideDan@abc.com | Consumer investigative segment — ideal for this story. |
| ABC7 General News Desk | abc7ny@abc.com | General tips; call 917-260-7700 for breaking tips. |
| CBS2 New York | desk@cbs2ny.com | (212) 975-2161 |
| NBC 4 New York / WNBC | tips@nbcnewyork.com | (212) 664-4444 |
| FOX 5 New York / WNYW | fox5news@foxtv.com | (212) 452-3808 |
| PIX11 / WPIX | news@pix11.com | (212) 949-1100 |
| WNYC Public Radio | newsroom@wnyc.org | In-depth health coverage; longer format stories. |
Connecticut Local News
| Outlet | Contact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| WTNH News 8 (ABC, New Haven/Hartford) | reportit@wtnh.com | Primary CT tip line; strong consumer coverage. |
| FOX 61 / WTIC-TV (Hartford) | newsteam@fox61.com | Assignment desk: (860) 727-0082 |
| NBC 30 Connecticut | newstips@nbc30.com | West Hartford; tri-state coverage. |
| News 12 Connecticut | news12ct@news12.com | Norwalk; local family and consumer stories. |
| Connecticut Public Radio / WNPR | info@wnpr.org | Public radio; excellent for nuanced health policy stories. |
About this page: The core educational content on this page was written by Annie Frisbie, MA, IBCLC, PMH-C, Founder of City Lactation, who generously made it available for all IBCLCs to use and adapt on their own platforms. The letter templates, media contacts, and additional resources were compiled by Dr. Ashley Robinson, DrPH, IBCLC.
Are you a lactation consultant or perinatal provider? You are welcome to use and adapt the content on this page for your own website and patients — no attribution required. Pay it forward by sharing the resource widely.
This page is an advocacy tool, not legal advice. Policy details are drawn from UnitedHealthcare's publicly posted June 2026 Commercial Reimbursement Policy Update Bulletin. If you are an IBCLC looking for a provider-specific toolkit, visit paperlesslactation.com/blog/fight-uhc.