“…We used a qualitative approach to explore in depth the strategies that organizations used to implement or expand their family planning program. The interview guide was based on known gaps in family planning services that followed the 2011 funding cuts, as well as potential challenges to offering contraception at primary care organizations that have been noted in other studies (Akers et al 2010;Beeson et al 2014;Hopkins et al 2015;White et al 2015). Specifically, the interviews explored how organizations began offering services through the EPHC program, the range of reproductive health services offered on-site or by referral, protocols for providing contraception that were informed by the U.S. Medical Eligibility Criteria for contraception (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2010), other sources of funding for women's health care (e.g., Title X, the state's Family Planning program, and the state-funded fee-for-service Texas Women's Health Program [TWHP]), and approaches to address family planning clients' primary health care needs; we also asked new primary care contractors about any family planning services offered prior to receiving EPHC funds.…”