The Day

Trump limits birth control rule

Religious groups welcome action by Health and Human Services Department

- By JULIET EILPERIN, AMY GOLDSTEIN and WILLIAM WAN

The Trump administra­tion issued a rule Friday that sharply limits the Affordable Care Act’s contracept­ion coverage mandate, a move that could mean many American women would no longer have access to birth control free of charge.

The new regulation, issued by the Health and Human Services Department, allows a much broader group of employers and insurers to exempt themselves from covering contracept­ives such as birth control pills on religious or moral grounds. The decision, anticipate­d from the Trump administra­tion for months, is the latest twist in a seesawing legal and ideologica­l fight that has surrounded this aspect of the 2010 health-care law nearly from the start.

Several religious groups, which battled the Obama administra­tion for years over the controvers­ial requiremen­t, welcomed the action.

Women’s rights organizati­ons and some medical profession­als portrayed it as a blow to women’s health, warning that it could lead to a higher number of unintended pregnancie­s.

The rule change is among the recent moves by President Donald Trump to dismantle initiative­s enacted under the Obama administra­tion. It fulfills a crucial promise Trump made as a candidate to appeal to social conservati­ves and that he repeated in May when he signed

an executive order in the Rose Garden to expand religious liberty.

Senior Health and Human Services officials, briefing reporters early on condition of anonymity, contended the change will still leave “99.9 percent of women” with access to free birth control through their insurance. They said the estimate was based on the finite number of groups that have filed about 50 lawsuits over the provision.

This latest rewriting of the federal policy, in an interim final rule that takes effect immediatel­y, broadens the entities that may claim religious objections to providing contracept­ive coverage to nonprofit organizati­ons and for-profit companies, even ones that are publicly traded. Also included are higher educationa­l institutio­ns that arrange for insurance for their students, as well as individual­s whose employers are willing to provide health plans consistent with their beliefs.

A separate section covers moral objections, allowing exemptions under similar circumstan­ces except for publicly traded companies.

As part of the rule, made publicly available in the Federal Register late Friday morning, administra­tion officials estimate that 120,000 women at most will lose access to free contracept­ives — many fewer than critics predict.

They write that they do not know how many employers or insurers that omitted contracept­ive coverage before the ACA did so based on religious beliefs that would now allow them to be exempt. For that reason, the law says, HHS cannot predict how many entities will want exemptions, other than the groups that have filed recent lawsuits or made other public statements against the Obama-era policy.

The analysis concludes that perhaps one-third of women who get insurance through such groups — the estimated 120,000 — would end up paying for birth control on their own.

The new policy “will result in some persons covered in plans of newly exempt entities not receiving coverage or payments for contracept­ive services,” the rule acknowledg­es. But it says there is not “sufficient data to determine the actual effect ... on plan participan­ts and beneficiar­ies, including for costs they may incur for contracept­ive coverage, nor of unintended pregnancie­s that may occur.”

Catholic controvers­y

The controvers­y first arose as part of the Obama administra­tion’s initial definition of preventive care that insurers must cover under the ACA — which encompasse­d birth control, officials decided.

Subsequent accommodat­ions gave exemptions of sorts to houses of worship, nonprofits with religious affiliatio­ns and closely held for-profit companies. Such employers have been able to opt out of providing the coverage and instead have their insurance company pay for it by notifying the insurer, a third-party administra­tor or the federal government. That situation will continue.

Organizati­ons affiliated with the Catholic Church, which teaches against birth control other than by natural means, have been among the most vocal opponents. They’ve argued that having to cover the cost of contracept­ion through health insurance plans is tantamount to being forced by the government to be complicit in a sin.

In the past several years, lawsuits have been filed by nuns, Catholic charities, hospitals and universiti­es. Even now, litigation remains in several federal appeals courts.

One challenge was heard by the Supreme Court, and the justices ruled in 2014 that it was illegal to impose the mandate on “closely held corporatio­ns” such as Hobby Lobby, the craft store chain. Its Christian owners had objected to the idea of paying for several kinds of the birth control that must be covered.

Despite HHS’s officials 99.9 percent prediction, no one knows how many companies and institutio­ns will now claim an exemption and, in turn, how many women will lose access to no-cost birth control.

The new rule is almost certain to spark fresh litigation. The National Women’s Law Center — which estimates that in 2013 alone, the contracept­ion requiremen­t saved women $1.4 billion in oral contracept­ive costs — has vowed to challenge the Trump administra­tion in court. It plans to argue that the new policy amounts to sex discrimina­tion, since it will disproport­ionately affect women. It also plans to allege religious discrimina­tion, arguing that it will allow employers to impose their religious beliefs on employees.

“The Trump administra­tion is treating birth control as if it’s not even health care. We see this as part of the larger war they are waging on women’s health,” said Mara Gandal-Powers, senior counsel at the National Women’s Law Center. “For some [women], it means choosing between preventive care like contracept­ives and paying their rent, their mortgage, electric bill.”

Other groups focused on a different issue, with Anne Davis of Physicians for Reproducti­ve Health arguing that the widened exemptions will leave many women “vulnerable to the whim of their employers. ... An employer’s beliefs have no place in these private decisions, just as they would not in any other conversati­on about a patient’s health care.”

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