Released by The White House - Office of the Press Secretary:
FACT SHEET: Women's
Preventive Services and Religious Institutions
Thanks
to the Affordable Care Act, most health insurance plans will cover women's
preventive services, including contraception, without charging a co-pay or
deductible beginning in August, 2012. This new law will save money for
millions of Americans and ensure Americans nationwide get the high-quality care
they need to stay healthy.
Today,
President Obama will announce that his Administration will implement a policy
that accommodates religious liberty while protecting the health of women.
Today, nearly 99 percent of all women have used contraception at some point in
their lives, but more than half of all women between the ages of 18-34 struggle
to afford it.
Under
the new policy to be announced today, women will have free preventive care that
includes contraceptive services no matter where she works. The policy
also ensures that if a woman works for religious employers with objections to
providing contraceptive services as part of its health plan, the religious
employer will not be required to provide contraception coverage, but her
insurance company will be required to offer contraceptive care free of charge.
The
new policy ensures women can get contraception without paying a co-pay and
addresses important concerns raised by religious groups by ensuring that
objecting religious employers will not have to provide contraceptive coverage
or refer women to organizations that provide contraception. Background on
this policy is included below:
- Section
2713 of the Affordable Care Act, the Administration adopted new guidelines that
will require most private health plans to cover preventive services for women
without charging a co-pay starting on August 1, 2012. These preventive
services include well women visits, domestic violence screening, and
contraception, and all were recommended to the Secretary of Health and Human
Services by the independent Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of
Science.
- Today,
the Obama Administration will publish final rules in the Federal Register that:
o Exempts churches,
other houses of worship, and similar organizations from covering contraception on
the basis of their religious objections.
o Establishes a one
year transition period for religious organizations while this policy is being
implemented.
- The
President will also announce that his Administration will propose and finalize
a new regulation during this transition year to address the religious
objections of the non-exempted religious organizations. The new regulation will
require insurance companies to cover contraception if the non-exempted
religious organization chooses not to. Under the policy:
o Religious
organizations will not have to provide contraceptive coverage or refer their
employees to organizations that provide contraception.
o Religious
organizations will not be required to subsidize the cost of contraception.
o Contraception
coverage will be offered to women by their employers' insurance companies
directly, with no role for religious employers who oppose contraception.
o Insurance companies
will be required to provide contraception coverage to these women free of
charge.
Covering
contraception saves money for insurance companies by keeping women healthy and
preventing spending on other health services. For example, there was no
increase in premiums when contraception was added to the Federal Employees
Health Benefit System and required of non-religious employers in Hawaii.
One study found that covering contraception lowered premiums by 10 percent or
more.