USA TODAY US Edition

Our view: Trump administra­tion goes backward on birth control

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Nearly 50 years ago, then-Rep. George H.W. Bush of Texas called family planning a “public health matter” and pushed for the first federal measure to provide money for free birth control. Another Republican, President Nixon, signed that law and called for a national commitment to provide family planning services in the next five years “to all those who want them but cannot afford them.”

Not only has the nation not fulfilled that promise, the Trump administra­tion has recently made it tougher to do so — undoing progress made under President Obama.

This month, federal judges in Pennsylvan­ia and California issued orders temporaril­y blocking the Trump rules. And once again, basic preventive health care for women, which shouldn’t have been controvers­ial in the first place, is the subject of ferocious legal battles.

This latest round dates to 2012, when the Obama administra­tion initially required most employers to provide free contracept­ives to women through their health insurance coverage. The plan spurred controvers­y and litigation because of an unwise decision to include religiousl­y affiliated universiti­es, charities and others under the mandate to provide free contracept­ion.

Many religious groups accepted an accommodat­ion the administra­tion offered, but about 100 filed suit. Those cases still aren’t resolved.

To end the legal wrangling, all President Trump needed to do was exempt those religious groups and offer their employees a realistic alternativ­e to get free contracept­ion. He did neither.

Instead, his Health and Human Services Department opened a gaping hole in the mandate by allowing many employers and groups to deny coverage not only based on religious beliefs, but also on their “moral objections.”

A moral exemption could be over just about anything. An employer could have “a sincerely held moral conviction that women do not have a place in the workplace,” U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetleston­e wrote in her Dec. 15 ruling. “It is difficult to comprehend a rule that does more to undermine the contracept­ive mandate or that intrudes more into the lives of women.”

Employers do not even have to file their objection with the federal government. They can just end coverage. Officials estimated that about 31,700 women could be affected. The judge said the number may be “significan­tly higher.”

As the prestigiou­s Institute of Medicine found, free contracept­ion is an important part of preventive care for women. Many women use birth control to treat other medical conditions. Access to birth control prevents unintended pregnancie­s and by extension can prevent abortions, a goal shared by many of the religious groups that fought the mandate.

Trump’s decision could defuse lawsuits filed by religious groups. Good. But his ham-handed, broad-brush action has pushed the program right back into court. Fifty years, and this absurd battle rages on.

 ??  ?? Supreme Court protest in 2014. PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP
Supreme Court protest in 2014. PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP

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