Can I get Abortion Care and Birth Control In One Visit?

Can I get Abortion Care and Birth Control In One Visit?

Yes, you can absolutely get abortion care and start a new method of birth control during the very same visit.

In fact, addressing both your immediate healthcare needs and your long-term reproductive planning in a single appointment is a standard medical best practice. Most patients find that combining these services is highly convenient, saves time, and provides immediate peace of mind.

How Birth Control Fits into Your Care Plan

Because your body can resume ovulation very quickly after an abortion—often within one to two weeks—starting a contraceptive method right away is a safe and effective way to prevent an unplanned pregnancy. How and when you start your birth control depends entirely on the type of abortion care you choose:

If You Choose an In-Clinic Procedure

If you choose a standard 5-to-10-minute aspiration procedure, you can have almost any method of contraception initiated before you leave the clinic:

  • Long-Acting Reversible Contraception (LARCs): An Intrauterine Device (IUD) or a contraceptive arm implant (like Nexplanon) can be inserted by your healthcare provider immediately following your procedure while you are still comfortable and numb.

  • The Contraceptive Shot: You can receive a Depo-Provera injection on-site during your appointment.

  • Oral Pills, Patches, or Rings: Your provider can hand you your packs or write a prescription that you can start using immediately or on the Sunday following your visit.

If You Choose the Abortion Pill (Medication Abortion)

If you manage your care using the abortion pill—either in-person or via a virtual telehealth visit—you can still coordinate your birth control during your consultation:

  • Pills, Patches, and Rings: You can safely start oral contraceptives, the skin patch, or the vaginal ring as early as the same day you take the first abortion medication (Mifepristone), or the day after you finish the second medication (Misoprostol).

  • IUDs and Implants: Because a medical abortion takes place at home over a few days, an IUD or arm implant cannot be inserted on day one. Instead, your provider will seamlessly schedule a quick follow-up appointment—usually about 2 weeks later—to insert your device once the pregnancy has completely passed.

Step-by-Step Guide to Coordinating Your Visit

If you want to combine your care, follow this simple routine during your booking and consultation process:

1.Notify the Clinic Staff Ahead of Time:When booking your intake or virtual consultation, explicitly mention that you want to discuss long-term birth control options during the same visit..

Letting the team know in advance ensures that the necessary medical supplies, devices, or prescription formulas are prepared and ready for your arrival.

2.Select Your Preferred Contraceptive Method:Talk through your lifestyle, medical history, and preferences with your provider to choose a method that aligns with your body..

Whether you prefer a daily pill, a monthly patch, or a set-and-forget option like an IUD, your provider will help you weigh the clinical benefits of each.

3.Confirm Your Financial and Insurance Coverage:If utilizing private insurance or a state health plan, ask the billing coordinator to verify your specific contraceptive benefits..

Most insurance networks cover preventative contraceptives at 100%, meaning your birth control can often be added with zero extra out-of-pocket costs.

4.Complete Your Combined Treatment Plan:Leave your appointment with your device inserted, a prescription sent to your pharmacy, or a timeline set for your 2-week follow-up..

Finishing both steps in one sequence gives you immediate, long-term control over your reproductive health before you walk out the door.

Financial Coverage and Financial Protections

How your combined care is billed depends entirely on your insurance or payment track, but both options keep the process highly manageable:

  • Medicaid and State Plans: If you reside in a supportive state like Illinois, state-funded Medicaid fully covers both your abortion care and your birth control services—including consultations, exams, devices, and prescriptions—resulting in $0 out-of-pocket costs.

  • Private Insurance Plans: Most commercial health insurance plans cover contraceptive services at 100% under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), even if your specific plan has a deductible or copay for the abortion service itself.

  • Self-Pay and Anonymity: If you are paying out-of-pocket to maintain absolute personal privacy from a parent, spouse, or guardian on a shared insurance policy, clinics offer affordable flat rates. Charitable grants from regional abortion funds can also be stacked to help lower your baseline fees, allowing you to get care without insurance while maintaining total personal confidentiality.

Absolute Privacy and Patient Protections

Your contraceptive choices, medical records, and abortion care are entirely confidential under federal HIPAA guidelines. Your patient charts are digitally encrypted and legally sealed, meaning your school, your employer, or your family members have absolutely no legal right or technical ability to access your healthcare files. You are in complete control of your medical decisions.

We Are Here to Support Your Choices

You deserve comprehensive, compassionate reproductive healthcare that values your time, respects your budget, and guards your right to private care. Our medical team is here to help you navigate your options, access financial assistance, and establish a long-term wellness plan that gives you complete peace of mind.

[Book an Appointment Today] To review our all-inclusive pricing, verify your insurance or Medicaid benefits, or schedule your combined care visit with a supportive provider, visit our secure patient portal to Schedule an Appointment.

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