Monday’s Supreme Court decision in Whole Woman’s Health vs. Hellerstedt, which struck down a Texas law aimed at regulating legal abortion out of existence, was a resounding victory for the reproductive rights movement. But while everyone should take a day to celebrate this win, the sad fact of the matter is that, after decades of abuse at the hands of the religious rights, the state of reproductive health care is not even close to what it should be in the United States.

Our unplanned pregnancy rate is still high and access to abortion and other reproductive health care simply isn’t what it should be. Ending Texas’ draconian abortion law is just the beginning. There’s a lot more work to be done before the pro-choice movement can rest on its laurels.

1) End the Hyde Amendment. Since 1976, the Hyde Amendment has banned abortion from being covered by federal funding, except in the rare instances of rape or a threat to the health of the mother. That means no federal employees, service women, veterans or women on Medicaid have access to coverage for abortion. These are often the women who can least afford to pay out of pocket in the event of an unplanned pregnancy that they need to terminate.

The effects of the Hyde Amendment have been devastating. One out of four women on Medicaid who wants an abortion simply isn’t able to get one, resulting in forced childbirth. Of those women who do get an abortion, raising the money often results in major hardship for the family. The $300-$500 that an abortion costs pinches a middle-class budget, but for those who live in poverty, that often means having to sell things off, borrow money from relatives, or choose between getting the abortion and other life necessities. Women on Medicaid often delay the abortion at least 2-3 weeks in order to raise the money.

Servicewomen face many of the same barriers, with the additional problem of often being unable to even see a doctor who offers abortion, since military hospitals are barred from doing them. Research shows that many of these women consider unsafe black market methods.

Repealing the Hyde Amendment would go a long way towards making sure that every woman, no matter her job or income, can get an abortion is she needs one.

2) End laws restricting private insurance coverage of abortion. On top of the Hyde Amendment, many states have laws, some tied to Obamacare and some not, that restrict or even ban private insurance plans from covering abortion. These laws are less well-studied than the Hyde Amendment, but it’s reasonable to assume they create similar burdens for women on private insurance seeking abortion.

3) Expand access to affordable contraception. Under Obamacare, women are supposed to be getting copay free contraception through their insurance. Unfortunately, as many women are finding, the insurance companies are using red tape, throwing up so many confusing rules between women and their free birth control that many women just give up. There needs to be an effort to force these companies to make free birth control not only available, but easy t0 understand and get without having to spend hours on the phone with customer service people to figure out exactly what you’e entitled to get under what elaborate bureaucratic rules.