cloven hooves The Personal Is Political Reproductive Rights Article Contraception Is Free by Law. So Why Are a Quarter of Women Still Paying for It?

Article Contraception Is Free by Law. So Why Are a Quarter of Women Still Paying for It?

Article Contraception Is Free by Law. So Why Are a Quarter of Women Still Paying for It?

 
Daisy
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Jun 30 2024, 12:45 PM
#1
The New York Times, June 26 2024.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/contraception-free-law-why-quarter-172940420.html

Quote:Last week, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chair of the Senate health committee, called on a government watchdog to investigate why insurance companies are still charging women for birth control — a move that thrust access to contraceptives back into the spotlight.

In a letter to the Government Accountability Office, the senator noted that insurance companies were charging Americans for contraceptives that, under federal law, should be free — and that they were also denying appeals from consumers who were seeking to have their contraceptives covered. Some experts estimate that those practices could affect access to birth control for millions of women.

Since 2012, the Affordable Care Act has mandated that private insurance plans cover the “full range” of contraceptives for women approved by the Food and Drug Administration, including female sterilizations, emergency contraceptives and any new products cleared by the FDA. The mandate also covers services associated with contraceptives, such as counseling, insertions or removals, and follow-up care.

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Daisy
Jun 30 2024, 12:45 PM #1

The New York Times, June 26 2024.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/contraception-free-law-why-quarter-172940420.html

Quote:Last week, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chair of the Senate health committee, called on a government watchdog to investigate why insurance companies are still charging women for birth control — a move that thrust access to contraceptives back into the spotlight.

In a letter to the Government Accountability Office, the senator noted that insurance companies were charging Americans for contraceptives that, under federal law, should be free — and that they were also denying appeals from consumers who were seeking to have their contraceptives covered. Some experts estimate that those practices could affect access to birth control for millions of women.

Since 2012, the Affordable Care Act has mandated that private insurance plans cover the “full range” of contraceptives for women approved by the Food and Drug Administration, including female sterilizations, emergency contraceptives and any new products cleared by the FDA. The mandate also covers services associated with contraceptives, such as counseling, insertions or removals, and follow-up care.


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