Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Court to look anew at health care law birth control rules

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON >> The Supreme Court will consider allowing the Trump administra­tion to enforce rules that allow more employers to deny insurance coverage for contracept­ives to women.

The justices agreed Friday to yet another case stemming from President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, this time about cost-free birth control. The court probably will hear arguments in April.

The high court will review an appeals court ruling that blocked the Trump administra­tion rules because it did not follow proper procedures. The new policy on contracept­ion, issued by the Department of Health and Human Services, would allow more categories of employers, including publicly traded companies, to opt out of providing no-cost birth control to women by claiming religious objections.

The policy also would allow some employers, though not publicly traded companies, to raise moral objections to covering contracept­ives.

Employers also would be able to cover some birth control methods, and not others. Some employers have objected to covering modern, long-acting implantabl­e contracept­ives, such as IUDs, which are more expensive and considered highly effective in preventing pregnancie­s.

The share of female employees paying their own money for birth control pills has plunged to under 4 percent, from 21 percent, since contracept­ion became a covered preventive health benefit under the Obama-era health law, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Even though the Trump rules remain blocked, a ruling by a federal judge in Texas in June already allows most people who object to covering contracept­ion to avoid doing so.

The issue in all the cases is the method originally adopted by the Obama administra­tion to allow religiousl­y affiliated organizati­ons to opt out of paying for contracept­ion while making sure that women under their plans would not be left with the bill.

Some groups complained that the opt-out process violated their religious beliefs and wanted to be relieved of even signaling their religious objection.

The Trump administra­tion issued new rules in 2018. New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia challenged them in federal court, and the appeals court in Philadelph­ia decided the rules should be blocked nationwide. The states said the administra­tion rules would result in fewer women receiving cost-free birth control through employer health plans and said states would have to spend more money in their programs that provide contracept­ives to women who want them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States