Free Breast Pumps and Maternity Support for Single Mothers in Nevada
Last Updated on September 22, 2025 by Rachel
Free Breast Pumps & Maternity Resources for Single Mothers in Nevada
Last updated: September 2025
🚨 Emergency Help First:
- If you or your baby are in danger: call 911 immediately.
- Maternal mental health 24/7 support: call or text 1‑833‑TLC‑MAMA (1‑833‑852‑6262) for the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline. English/Spanish with interpreters in 60+ languages. (mchb.hrsa.gov, nichd.nih.gov)
- Nevada 2‑1‑1 for quick local referrals: dial 211 or visit Nevada 211 for food, diapers, housing, transportation, and clinic locations. Phone hours changed to Monday–Friday 9:00 AM–9:00 PM (PST) effective July 1, 2025. (nevada211.org)
- Breastfeeding helpline (M–F, 9 AM–6 PM ET): call 1‑800‑994‑9662 (Office on Women’s Health). (womenshealth.gov)
✅ Quick Help Box: do these first
- If you have Nevada Medicaid managed care: call your plan now to request your pump.
- Anthem Medicaid: 1‑844‑396‑2329 (TTY 711)
- UnitedHealthcare HPN (Medicaid): 1‑800‑962‑8074 (TTY 711)
- Molina: 1‑833‑685‑2102
- SilverSummit: 1‑844‑366‑2880
Plans use vendors such as Edgepark, Byram, or Aeroflow and have specific timing rules. See the MCO table below. (nevadawic.org)
- If you are on Nevada Medicaid fee‑for‑service (no MCO): ask your OB/midwife for a prescription and contact a Medicaid DME provider that carries HCPCS E0603 (personal‑use electric) or E0604 (hospital‑grade rental) pumps. Use the Nevada Medicaid DME provider list. Member Services: 1‑800‑992‑0900. (nevadawic.org, dhcfp.nv.gov)
- If you’re privately insured (Marketplace/employer plan): the ACA requires coverage of breastfeeding support and a pump with no copay when in‑network. Call the number on your card and ask how to order. (healthcare.gov)
- If you’re WIC‑eligible and already delivered: Nevada WIC can loan pumps and provide accessories at no cost. Call 1‑800‑863‑8942 or contact your clinic. (Pregnant participants are asked to go through their insurance/Medicaid first.) (nevadawic.org)
- No insurance and need coverage fast: apply at ACCESS Nevada online and/or call DWSS. Online portal is open 24/7. Expect up to 45 days for decisions (faster if all proofs are uploaded). DWSS statewide: 1‑800‑992‑0900. (dwss.nv.gov, dhhs.nv.gov)
🧭 Quick Reference Cheat Sheet
| Your situation | First call | How to request a pump | Typical timeline | Where to read more |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicaid – Anthem | 1‑844‑396‑2329 | Order via Edgepark; one per lifetime; hospital‑grade needs prior auth | About 4 weeks after approval | Nevada WIC MCO reference sheet (May 2025) (nevadawic.org) |
| Medicaid – UHC/HPN | 1‑800‑962‑8074 | Northern NV: Edgepark handles Rx; Southern NV: Southwest Medical DME ships | Ship within 48 hours (North) or 2–3 business days (South) after Rx | Nevada WIC MCO reference sheet (May 2025) (nevadawic.org) |
| Medicaid – Molina | 1‑833‑685‑2102 | Wellness Rewards Center helps place order; prior auth for hospital‑grade | About 2–3 weeks after approval | Nevada WIC MCO reference sheet (May 2025) (nevadawic.org) |
| Medicaid – SilverSummit | 1‑844‑366‑2880 | Byram/Aeroflow obtains Rx; ships at 28+ weeks | Pump arrives ~2 days after shipment | Nevada WIC MCO reference sheet (May 2025) (nevadawic.org) |
| Medicaid fee‑for‑service | 1‑800‑992‑0900 | Provider Rx, then select a Medicaid‑enrolled DME offering E0603/E0604 | Varies by DME inventory | DHCFP DME page; WIC pump guide (HCPCS codes listed) (dhcfp.nv.gov, nevadawic.org) |
| Private insurance | Number on your card | Ask for in‑network DME; ACA covers pumps and counseling with $0 copay (non‑grandfathered) | Often 1–2 weeks after order | HealthCare.gov breastfeeding benefits (healthcare.gov) |
| WIC (postpartum) | 1‑800‑863‑8942 | Clinic issues pump to breastfeeding participants; accessories available | If already enrolled: ASAP; if new: up to 20 days to receive pump | Nevada WIC pump page & guide (May 2025) (nevadawic.org) |
Nevada’s Free Pump Options at a Glance
Most important action: call your health plan or WIC right away to start the request. Delays often come from missing prescriptions or ordering from an out‑of‑network vendor.
Medicaid Managed Care pump ordering details (Anthem, UHC/HPN, Molina, SilverSummit)
- What’s covered: personal‑use electric pumps (HCPCS E0603) for most members; hospital‑grade rentals (E0604) require medical need and prior authorization. Plans vary on timing (some at 28+ weeks, some after delivery). (nevadawic.org)
- How to start: call your plan’s Member Services and ask for “breast pump benefit/how to order,” then follow their vendor workflow (Edgepark, Byram, Aeroflow). Have your Medicaid ID, estimated due date, and OB/midwife information ready. (nevadawic.org)
- Timelines: plan‑specific—see Cheat Sheet. Mark your calendar; if nothing ships within the stated window, call back and ask for “case management” or “escalation for DME pump order.” (nevadawic.org)
- Extras you can use: most Nevada MCOs offer value‑added pregnancy perks such as home‑delivered meals after delivery, transportation assistance (gas/bus/Uber cards), baby showers with supplies, and postpartum rewards. Ask your plan about current offers. (nevadawic.org)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Ask your OB/midwife to fax a new prescription directly to the plan’s vendor.
- Request a plan “care manager” to help track the order.
- If delayed beyond stated timeframes, file a plan grievance and—if unresolved—complain to Nevada Medicaid Member Services: 1‑800‑992‑0900. (nevadawic.org)
Medicaid fee‑for‑service (no MCO)
- What’s covered: medically necessary pumps via Nevada Medicaid DME. Use DHCFP’s DME page to find DME providers and search under “Suction Pump/Room Vaporizers;” look for codes E0603/E0604. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
- Steps:
- Get a prescription from an authorized provider (physician, APRN, PA, nurse midwife, hospital, school health service, or a DME provider with proper documentation).
- Contact a Medicaid‑enrolled DME and ask how to submit your Rx.
- Keep your phone on; DMEs may call for delivery confirmation. (nevadawic.org)
- Timing: depends on DME stock and prior authorization if requested. Follow up every 3–5 business days until delivery. (nevadawic.org)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Email the state DME team at dme@dhcfp.nv.gov and call 1‑800‑992‑0900 for help locating a DME with inventory. (nevadawic.org)
Private insurance (Marketplace/employer plans)
- Your right: non‑grandfathered plans must cover breastfeeding support, counseling, and a breast pump for the duration of breastfeeding, with $0 cost‑sharing when you use in‑network providers. Plans can apply “reasonable medical management,” such as pump type (manual vs electric), rental length, and timing (before or after birth). (healthcare.gov, hhs.gov, pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- Steps: call your plan and ask:
- Which in‑network DME vendors can provide my covered pump?
- Do you require a prescription or prior authorization?
- Can I receive the pump before delivery and which models are covered?
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- File a complaint with the Nevada Division of Insurance Consumer Services (North 775‑687‑0700, South 702‑486‑4009, Toll‑free 888‑872‑3234) or submit a complaint online (health coverage denials, delays, network issues). (doi.nv.gov)
WIC pumps and breastfeeding support (postpartum)
- Nevada WIC can loan pumps and provide accessories to breastfeeding WIC participants after delivery. If you’re pregnant, WIC will first refer you to your Medicaid or insurance for pump coverage; WIC cannot issue pumps to pregnant participants. Statewide WIC: 1‑800‑863‑8942. (nevadawic.org)
- Peer counselors and clinics statewide: see the WIC Peer Counselor list and clinic finder; many locations offer mom‑to‑mom support and quick help with latch, flange sizing, and pump cleaning. (nevadawic.org)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Call the Nevada Breastfeeding Hotline via WIC at 1‑800‑863‑8942 and ask for a lactation callback. You can also call the OWH breastfeeding helpline 1‑800‑994‑9662 (M–F). (dpbh.nv.gov, womenshealth.gov)
2025 Income & Eligibility You Can Use Today
Pregnancy Medicaid in Nevada is now up to 200% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL)
- Effective July 1, 2025, Nevada increased pregnancy Medicaid income eligibility to 200% FPL. Nevada also provides 12 months of postpartum coverage for Medicaid members, effective January 1, 2024. (medicaid.gov)
- Use this table to estimate eligibility (48 contiguous states—Nevada). Annual figures come from HHS 2025 Poverty Guidelines; monthly values are calculated by dividing annual income by 12.
| Household size | 200% FPL yearly | 200% FPL monthly (calc) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $31,300 | $2,608 |
| 2 | $42,300 | $3,525 |
| 3 | $53,300 | $4,442 |
| 4 | $64,300 | $5,358 |
| 5 | $75,300 | $6,275 |
| 6 | $86,300 | $7,192 |
| 7 | $97,300 | $8,108 |
| 8 | $108,300 | $9,025 |
| Source: HHS/ASPE 2025 Poverty Guidelines and Legal Services Corporation 200% reference chart. (aspe.hhs.gov, govinfo.gov) |
- How to apply: ACCESS Nevada online or through a DWSS office; pregnancy Medicaid coverage can be retroactive up to 3 months if eligible. (dwss.nv.gov)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- If you get a denial but your income is close to the limit, appeal and submit updated paystubs. If you recently lost income, ask about “reasonable opportunity” to provide documents and retroactive coverage. See the DWSS application page for forms and addresses. (dwss.nv.gov)
Nevada WIC income guidelines (2025–2026 benefit year)
- WIC uses 185% FPL. Below are selected monthly limits published in the Federal Register (effective July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2026):
| Household size | 185% monthly |
|---|---|
| 1 | $2,413 |
| 2 | $3,261 |
| 3 | $4,109 |
| 4 | $4,957 |
| 5 | $5,805 |
| Source: USDA Food & Nutrition Service, 2025–26 WIC Income Eligibility Guidelines. (fns.usda.gov, govinfo.gov) |
- Bring to your WIC appointment: photo ID, proof of Nevada address, and proof of income for the last 30 days; participation in Medicaid/SNAP/TANF can qualify you “adjunctively.” (nevadawic.org)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Ask WIC for a “nutrition risk” re‑screen or peer counselor referral. If the clinic is full, ask to be waitlisted and call Nevada WIC statewide at 1‑800‑863‑8942. (nevadawic.org)
Nevada Check Up (CHIP) for your baby
- If your newborn doesn’t qualify for Medicaid, Nevada Check Up covers children in families with income up to 200% FPL. Quarterly premiums per family are 25∗∗,∗∗25**, **50, or $80, with no copays. Contact Nevada Check Up at 775‑684‑3660 or apply via ACCESS Nevada. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- If you’re over income by a small amount, apply through Nevada Health Link for a subsidized Marketplace plan during Special Enrollment (having a baby qualifies). Assistance line: 1‑800‑547‑2927 (TTY 711). (nevadahealthlink.com)
Nevada Maternity Care You’re Entitled To With Medicaid
- Nevada Medicaid covers prenatal visits, labs, ultrasounds, labor and delivery, anesthesia, hospital stay, postpartum visits, family planning, and—as available—doula services, home births, and freestanding birth centers. Check your plan benefits for network rules. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
- Postpartum Medicaid is 12 months continuous for eligible members. Make your postpartum visit within 6–8 weeks and keep coverage active for mental health, contraception, and lactation care throughout the first year after birth. (medicaid.gov)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- If your coverage terminated early, call DWSS 1‑800‑992‑0900 to review your postpartum eligibility and request reinstatement under the 12‑month continuous coverage policy. (medicaid.gov)
Your Rights to Pump at Work in Nevada
- Nevada law (NRS 608.0193) requires most employers to provide reasonable break time and a private, non‑bathroom space to express milk for up to one year after birth; retaliation is prohibited. Smaller employers (< 50 employees) may claim undue hardship, and certain construction sites and corrections are excepted. Public bodies have parallel duties (NRS 281.755). (leg.state.nv.us, nevada.public.law)
- Federal PUMP Act under the FLSA expands rights to more workers and requires reasonable break time and a private space, not a bathroom. Learn how to enforce your rights with DOL WHD Fact Sheet #73. (dol.gov)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Escalate in writing to HR with the statute citation above and request a compliant space. If unresolved, contact the U.S. Department of Labor (Wage & Hour Division) or the Nevada Labor Commissioner and include dates, times, and any denials in your complaint. See DOL’s resources on breaks to pump and FMLA if you also need bonding leave. (dol.gov, beta.dol.gov)
Nevada Leave & Flex Time You Can Use
- FMLA basics for eligible workers: up to 12 weeks unpaid, job‑protected leave for birth/bonding in a 12‑month period; employer must continue your group health insurance. (beta.dol.gov)
- Nevada paid leave law (SB 312): most private employers with 50+ employees must let you accrue at least 0.01923 hours of paid leave per hour worked (≈ 40 hours/year for full‑time) usable for any reason. Check your paystub for balances. (clarkcountybar.org, leg.state.nv.us)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- Ask HR for your paid leave balance and policy. If your employer refuses legally required leave or accommodations, keep records and contact the Nevada Labor Commissioner or DOL. (clarkcountybar.org)
Required Documents & Application Checklist
- For Medicaid/ACCESS Nevada (upload clear photos or PDFs):
- Proof of identity: driver’s license or state ID.
- Proof of Nevada address: recent utility bill, lease, or mail with your name.
- Proof of income: last 30 days of paystubs, unemployment letter, or self‑employment records.
- Pregnancy verification: prenatal record or provider note with due date.
- SSNs for applicants if available.
- Plan choice (if in Clark/Washoe): pick a Medicaid MCO to avoid random assignment.
Expect up to 45 days for standard processing; disability cases can take up to 90 days. (dhhs.nv.gov)
- For WIC appointment:
- ID for you and child, proof of residency, proof of income; prior participation in Medicaid/SNAP/TANF also qualifies. (nevadawic.org)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Ordering from an out‑of‑network DME: this often leads to denials or bills. Always confirm the vendor is in‑network for your plan. (healthcare.gov)
- Waiting until after delivery to start the request: several Medicaid plans allow pump orders in late pregnancy (for example, 28+ weeks). Start early to avoid hospital discharge without a pump. (nevadawic.org)
- Not including a prescription or missing prior authorization when a hospital‑grade pump is needed. Ask your provider to include medical need, pump type, and your weeks’ gestation/postpartum status. (nevadawic.org)
- Skipping your postpartum visit: you have 12 months Medicaid postpartum coverage—use it for lactation support and medical needs. (medicaid.gov)
Local Nevada Contacts & Support
WIC and lactation
- Nevada WIC statewide: 1‑800‑863‑8942; clinic finder and breastfeeding support pages list pump information, peer counselors, and accessories. (nevadawic.org)
- Breastfeeding peer counselor locations: clinics across Clark and Washoe Counties and rural areas; see the WIC Peer Counselor page for addresses. (nevadawic.org)
Hospitals & community lactation
| Region | Resource | How they help | Contact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carson City/Douglas | Carson Tahoe Lactation Line | IBCLC callbacks and support groups | 775‑445‑7249 (message; callback within about 24 hours) (carsontahoe.com) |
| Las Vegas | Centennial Hills Hospital Breastfeeding Group | In‑person support twice monthly; lactation office | 702‑629‑1698; events calendar lists dates/times (centennialhillshospital.com) |
| Northern Nevada | NNBC Resources | Roster of classes and contacts; rural links | See NNBC resources page (phone numbers for Banner Churchill, others) (nnbc.wildapricot.org) |
| Reno | Nourish Nevada (private IBCLC practice) | Office/telehealth consults (fees vary; check plan coverage) | Website contact info (nourishnevada.com) |
Diapers and baby supplies
- Baby’s Bounty (Las Vegas/Northern NV): diaper banks and “Baby Bundle” kits; also offers formula by request and classes. Check site for dates and registration. (babysbounty.org)
Nevada Breastfeeding & Pumping Laws You Can Cite
- Breastfeeding in public is legal anywhere you’re allowed to be (NRS 201.232). (nevada.public.law)
- Private and public employers must provide reasonable break time and a private space (not a bathroom) to pump for up to one year (NRS 608.0193; NRS 281.755 for public bodies). (leg.state.nv.us, nevada.public.law)
- Federal PUMP Act expands who’s covered and clarifies enforcement under FLSA; see DOL WHD Fact Sheet #73 and FAQs. (dol.gov)
Diverse Communities
- LGBTQ+ single mothers: many Nevada WIC clinics and Medicaid MCOs offer inclusive lactation counseling and interpreter services; WIC explicitly notes free language help and support for different family structures. Ask for a peer counselor who matches your preferences. (nevadawic.org)
- Single mothers with disabilities or disabled children: use Nevada 2‑1‑1 to locate accessible clinics, early intervention, and home‑visiting programs. Medicaid covers necessary DME and supplies when medically necessary; ask for care management if your child needs specialty pumps or feeding support. (nevada211.org, dhcfp.nv.gov)
- Veteran single mothers: if you have TRICARE or VA maternity care, pumps are typically covered—contact your plan directly for vendor options. Also check Nevada 2‑1‑1 for local supports while you wait. (nevada211.org)
- Immigrant/refugee single moms: Nevada law authorizes enrollment for pregnant women up to 200% FPL and bars imposing a residency‑period requirement for otherwise‑eligible pregnant women. Ask about presumptive eligibility at your clinic while your full Medicaid application is processed. (law.justia.com)
- Tribal‑specific resources: ITCN WIC serves tribal and rural communities statewide, including breast pump assistance for postpartum breastfeeding participants. Mobile clinics reach rural towns. (first5nevada.org)
- Rural single moms with limited access: ask your MCO for transportation benefits (gas cards/bus passes/ride share) to prenatal or WIC visits and for tele‑lactation options; many Nevada MCOs list these as value‑added benefits. (nevadawic.org)
- Single fathers: dads and other caregivers can enroll eligible infants/children in WIC and Nevada Check Up; WIC eligibility is for caregivers of children under 5, not only mothers. (nevadawic.org)
- Language access: WIC and Nevada 2‑1‑1 provide free language assistance; the Maternal Mental Health Hotline also supports 60+ languages and text. (nevadawic.org, mchb.hrsa.gov)
Timelines You Can Expect
- Medicaid application decision: usually within 45 days when all proofs are provided; disability‑related cases can take up to 90 days. Retroactive coverage may cover bills up to the prior 3 months if eligible. (dhhs.nv.gov)
- Pump delivery after approval: varies by plan and vendor. Anthem average about 4 weeks; Molina about 2–3 weeks; SilverSummit ships once you’re 28+ weeks and arrives ~2 days after shipment; UHC/HPN ships within 48 hours in Northern NV and 2–3 business days in Southern NV after Rx. (nevadawic.org)
Tables You Can Screenshot or Share
Medicaid MCO pump ordering, timing, and contacts
| Plan | When you can order | Vendor process | Typical delivery | Member Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anthem | 3+ months pregnant or breastfeeding up to 6 months | Edgepark order; hospital‑grade needs prior auth | About 4 weeks post‑approval | 1‑844‑396‑2329 (TTY 711) (nevadawic.org) |
| UHC/HPN | At 28+ weeks | North: Edgepark handles Rx; South: Southwest Medical DME | 48 hours (North) or 2–3 business days (South) after Rx | 1‑800‑962‑8074 (TTY 711) (nevadawic.org) |
| Molina | Third trimester or breastfeeding | Wellness Rewards Center places order; prior auth for hospital‑grade | 2–3 weeks post‑approval | 1‑833‑685‑2102 (nevadawic.org) |
| SilverSummit | Pregnant or breastfeeding; ships at 28+ weeks | Byram/Aeroflow obtains Rx and ships at 28 weeks | ~2 days after shipment | 1‑844‑366‑2880 (TTY 1‑844‑804‑6086) (nevadawic.org) |
2025 Nevada pregnancy Medicaid income (200% FPL)
| Household | Yearly | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | $42,300 | $3,525 |
| 3 | $53,300 | $4,442 |
| 4 | $64,300 | $5,358 |
| Source: HHS/ASPE 2025 poverty guidelines; Medicaid SPA NV‑25‑0006 (effective July 1, 2025). (aspe.hhs.gov, medicaid.gov) |
WIC income limits (185% FPL) — monthly, 2025–2026
| Household | Monthly |
|---|---|
| 2 | $3,261 |
| 3 | $4,109 |
| 4 | $4,957 |
| 5 | $5,805 |
| Source: USDA FNS WIC Income Eligibility Guidelines. (fns.usda.gov) |
Workplace pumping rights snapshot
| Law | Who’s covered | What’s required | Timeframe | Where to get help |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NRS 608.0193 | Most NV employers; undue hardship exception if < 50 employees | Reasonable break time; private space not a bathroom; anti‑retaliation | Up to 1 year after birth | Nevada Labor law text; DOL PUMP resources (leg.state.nv.us, dol.gov) |
| PUMP Act (FLSA) | Most workers nationwide | Reasonable breaks; private non‑bathroom space; enforcement via WHD | 1 year after birth | DOL Fact Sheet #73 & FAQs (dol.gov) |
Hospitals and community lactation by region
| Area | Program | Phone |
|---|---|---|
| Carson City | Carson Tahoe Lactation Line | 775‑445‑7249 (carsontahoe.com) |
| Las Vegas | Centennial Hills Lactation Office | 702‑629‑1698 (centennialhillshospital.com) |
| Fallon/Rural West | Banner Churchill (education/support) | 775‑867‑7401 (education) / 775‑867‑7718 (1:1) (nnbc.wildapricot.org) |
| Reno | Sierra Medical Center New Moms Group | 775‑799‑7320 (nnbc.wildapricot.org) |
Real‑World Examples (what this looks like)
- Example A: you’re 29 weeks in Las Vegas with SilverSummit. Call 1‑844‑366‑2880; they’ll route your order to Byram/Aeroflow. Your OB’s Rx confirms weeks’ gestation; pump ships at 28+ weeks and usually arrives in ~2 days after the shipping notice. (nevadawic.org)
- Example B: you delivered last week, have fee‑for‑service Medicaid, and need a hospital‑grade rental for NICU separation. Ask your hospital lactation team to submit prior authorization for E0604 and help you contact a Medicaid DME from the DHCFP DME list. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
- Example C: you’re privately insured through Nevada Health Link. Your plan must cover a pump with $0 copay in‑network; call Member Services for DME options and ask whether you can get it before delivery. (healthcare.gov)
What We Include That Many Top Results Miss
- Exact MCO pump steps, delivery timelines, and phone numbers for Nevada’s four Medicaid plans.
- 2025 income numbers for pregnancy Medicaid at 200% FPL and WIC at 185% FPL with sources.
- State‑specific laws and complaint routes for workplace pumping, plus realistic appeal/escalation steps.
These fill common gaps we saw across typical search results that focus on national generalities or vendor marketing pages and often omit Nevada‑specific contacts, current postpartum coverage length, and concrete timelines. (medicaid.gov, nevadawic.org)
Ten Nevada‑Specific FAQs
- Is pregnancy Medicaid really up to 200% FPL now?
Yes. CMS approved Nevada SPA NV‑25‑0006; effective July 1, 2025. (medicaid.gov) - How long is postpartum Medicaid coverage in Nevada?
12 months continuous postpartum coverage effective January 1, 2024. (medicaid.gov) - Can I get a pump before delivery on Medicaid?
Often yes—plan rules differ. SilverSummit and UHC allow ordering in late pregnancy (e.g., 28+ weeks). Check your plan table above. (nevadawic.org) - What if I’m assigned to the wrong plan?
Call DWSS or your plan to ask about changing within the allowed window; meanwhile, the plan must cover your medically necessary services. - Do WIC pumps cost anything?
No. WIC loans pumps to postpartum breastfeeding participants and provides accessories at no cost. Call 1‑800‑863‑8942. (nevadawic.org) - Can I breastfeed in public in Nevada?
Yes, anywhere you’re allowed to be (NRS 201.232). (nevada.public.law) - Does my employer have to give me a pumping space?
Yes, a private, non‑bathroom space with reasonable break time for 1 year after birth under Nevada law and the federal PUMP Act (with limited exceptions). (leg.state.nv.us, dol.gov) - How long does Medicaid take to approve?
Typically ≤ 45 days (up to 90 days for disability). Apply online and upload all documents to avoid delays. (dhhs.nv.gov) - What are Nevada Check Up (CHIP) premiums?
25∗∗,∗∗25**, **50, or $80 per family per quarter, with no copays. (dhcfp.nv.gov) - Who can help me if my health insurer delays or denies my pump?
Nevada Division of Insurance Consumer Services: North 775‑687‑0700, South 702‑486‑4009, Toll‑free 888‑872‑3234; or file a complaint online. (doi.nv.gov)
Step‑By‑Step: How to Apply (don’t bury the lede)
- ACCESS Nevada online: create an account, complete the application, and upload proofs. Pick your Medicaid plan if you live in Clark or Washoe County. (dwss.nv.gov)
- Paper or in‑person: print forms from DWSS and deliver them to your nearest district office (see DWSS office lists by region). If phones are busy, go early and bring snacks for yourself and your kids. (dwss.nv.gov)
- After approval: call your plan the same day, request your pump, and ask for pregnancy case management for quicker help. See plan phone numbers above. (nevadawic.org)
What to do if this doesn’t work:
- If you haven’t heard back in 30 days, call DWSS 1‑800‑992‑0900 to check status and ensure no documents are missing; ask about retroactive coverage for recent bills. (dhhs.nv.gov)
About This Guide
- Compiled by the ASingleMother.org Editorial Team
- How we source: we use only official state/federal sites and established nonprofits, with direct links to application portals and hotlines. We verify against multiple official sources and track policy changes. See our Editorial Standards. This standards page was last updated August 2025. (nevadawic.org)
- Last verified: September 2025, next review April 2026.
- Corrections: found an issue or new resource for Nevada single moms? Email info@asinglemother.org; we aim to respond within 48 hours and update urgent corrections within 24 hours. (nevadawic.org)
Disclaimer
- Program details change: verify amounts, timelines, and eligibility directly with your plan, DWSS/Medicaid, WIC, or the agency linked in this guide before making decisions.
- Health content caution: this guide is informational, not medical or legal advice. For medical issues, talk to your clinician or lactation professional.
- Website security: when applying online, use official government portals linked here. Avoid sharing personal data on unofficial sites. If a link appears broken, navigate from the agency’s homepage.
- Independence: ASingleMother.org is independent and not affiliated with any government agency; we don’t accept compensation from programs we reference. (nevadawic.org)
Sources cited in this guide
- Nevada WIC breast pumps and MCO pump guide (Revised May 2025); WIC breastfeeding support and income pages; WIC appointment checklist. (nevadawic.org)
- DHCFP Medicaid DME and Medicaid Services information. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
- CMS/Medicaid SPA approvals for 12‑month postpartum coverage and 200% FPL pregnancy coverage. (medicaid.gov)
- HHS/ASPE 2025 Federal Poverty Guidelines; USDA FNS 2025–26 WIC IEG. (aspe.hhs.gov, fns.usda.gov)
- HealthCare.gov breastfeeding benefits and preventive services. (healthcare.gov)
- Nevada Check Up program description and premium structure. (dhcfp.nv.gov)
- Nevada breastfeeding laws and workplace pumping rights; DOL PUMP Act resources. (leg.state.nv.us, nevada.public.law, dol.gov)
- Nevada 2‑1‑1 updates. (nevada211.org)
- National Maternal Mental Health Hotline details. (mchb.hrsa.gov)
If something you need isn’t linked, tell us at info@asinglemother.org and we’ll track it down.
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- 🥛 WIC Benefits
- 🏦 TANF Assistance
- 🏠 Housing Assistance
- 👶 Childcare Assistance
- 🏥 Healthcare Assistance
- 🚨 Emergency Assistance
- 🤝 Community Support
- 🎯 Disability & Special Needs Support
- 🛋️ Free Furniture & Household Items
- 🏫 Afterschool & Summer Programs
- 🍼 Free Baby Gear & Children's Items
- 🎒 Free School Supplies & Backpacks
- 🏡 Home Buyer Down Payment Grants
- 🤱 Postpartum Health & Maternity Support
- 👩💼 Workplace Rights & Pregnancy Protection
- 💼 Business Grants & Assistance
- 🛡️ Domestic Violence Resources & Safety
- 💻 Digital Literacy & Technology Assistance
- 📈 Credit Repair & Financial Recovery
