Aug 4, 2011
Beginning next year, American women will have access to publicly-funded contraceptives under the Obama healthcare plan — and all without copays.
Following last month’s recommendation by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) that contraceptives and sterilization procedures be classed as “preventive services,” the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) — headed up by Kathleen Sebelius — concluded that “Not [covering contraceptives] would be like not covering flu shots.” In short, according to Sebelius and the current administration, women have a basic right to affordable healthcare; and access to cheap birth control is part and parcel of that right.
In response to the HHS decision, conservative groups have been indignant. In addition to the suspect claim that women have a basic right to affordable birth control (or even affordable healthcare), most unnerving is the very limited conscience protection clause introduced as a feature of the decision. According to Jeanne Monahan, head of the Family Research Council’s Center for Human Dignity:
HHS offered a fig leaf of conscience protection for certain churches that fulfill very specific criteria. However, religious groups that provide social services, engage in missions work to people of different religious faiths, religious health insurance companies, let alone religious health care providers and individuals in such health plans are not protected from any discrimination whatever. The new rule will force many Americans to violate their consciences or refrain from participating in health care insurance, further burdening an already costly system.