FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 30, 2023
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
Today,
the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) and the
Departments of Labor and the Treasury (Departments) proposed a rule to
strengthen access to birth control coverage under the Affordable Care
Act (ACA). Under the ACA, most plans are required to offer
coverage of birth control with no out-of-pocket cost. To date,
millions of women have benefited from this coverage. Today’s rule
proposes to expand and strengthen access to this coverage so that all
women who need or want birth control are able to obtain it. The action
is the latest effort by the Biden-Harris Administration to bolster
access to birth control at no cost.
The
ACA and its implementing regulations guarantee coverage of women’s
preventive services, including birth control and contraceptive
counseling, at no cost for women who are enrolled in group health plans
or individual health insurance coverage.
“Now
more than ever, access to and coverage of birth control is critical as
the Biden-Harris Administration works to help ensure women everywhere
can get the contraception they need, when they need it, and – thanks to
the ACA – with no out-of-pocket cost,” said HHS Secretary Xavier
Becerra. “Today’s proposed rule works to ensure that the tens of
millions of women across the country who have and will benefit from the
ACA will be protected. It says to women across the country, we have
your back.”
“We
know that access to affordable health care is vital. HHS, along with
the Department of Labor and the Department of the Treasury, continues
to protect and promote access to the reproductive health care services
people need, including contraception” said CMS Administrator Chiquita
Brooks-LaSure. “If this rule is finalized, individuals who have health
plans that would otherwise be subject to the ACA preventive services
requirements but have not covered contraceptive services because of a
moral or religious objection, would now have access.”
In
2018, final regulations expanded exemptions for religious beliefs and
moral convictions allowing private health plans and insurers to exclude
coverage of contraceptive services. The proposed rules released today
would remove the moral exemption and retain the existing religious
exemption. The 2018 rules include an optional accommodation that allows
objecting employers and private colleges and universities to completely
remove themselves from providing birth control coverage while ensuring
women and covered dependents enrolled in their plans can access
contraceptive services at no additional charge. Under the 2018 rules,
these women and covered dependents would get this contraceptive access
only if their employer or college or university voluntarily elects the
accommodation—leaving many without access to no-cost
contraceptives.
The
proposed rules seek to ensure broader access to contraceptive services
by creating an independent pathway for individuals enrolled in plans arranged
or offered by objecting entities to make their own choice to access
contraceptive services directly through a willing contraceptive
provider without any cost. This would allow women and covered
dependents to navigate their own care and still obtain birth control at
no cost in the event their plan or insurer has a religious exemption
and, if eligible, has not elected the optional accommodation. The
proposed rules would leave in place the existing religious exemption
for entities and individuals with objections, as well as the optional
accommodation for coverage.
The
proposed rules are part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment
to ensuring access to reproductive health care and follows earlier
action to expand access to birth control and family planning services.
HHS, the Department of Labor, and the Department of the Treasury
previously convened a meeting with health insurers and called on the
industry to commit to meeting their obligations to provide
contraceptive coverage as required by the ACA. The Departments also issued guidance to clarify protections for birth
control coverage under the ACA following multiple states’
efforts to restrict access to contraception in the wake of the Supreme
Court’s decision in Dobbs
v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. HHS also announced nearly $3 million in new
funding to bolster training and technical assistance for the nationwide
network of Title X family planning providers.
The
U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs has placed a heightened
importance on access to contraceptive services nationwide. HHS released
a report in August on actions taken to ensure access to reproductive
health care, including contraception, following the Supreme Court’s
ruling, with further details on future actions and commitments. Read
the report “Secretary’s Report: Health Care Under Attack: An
Action Plan to Protect and Strengthen Reproductive Care - PDF.”
To
review or comment on the proposed rules during its 60-day public
comment period, visit the Federal Register.
For
more information on the proposed rules, consult the fact sheet
available at https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/coverage-certain-preventive-services-under-affordable-care-act-proposed-rules.
In
addition, HHS also recently released a report entitled: “Marking the 50th Anniversary of Roe: Biden-Harris
Administration Efforts to Protect Reproductive Health Care,”
which outlines the actions HHS has taken in the face of the health
crisis precipitated by the Dobbs decision.
HHS
actions have been centered on six core priorities:
- Protecting
Access to Abortion Services
- Safeguarding Access to Birth Control
- Protecting Patient Privacy
- Promoting Access to Accurate Information
- Ensuring Non-discrimination in Healthcare
Delivery
- Evidence-Based Decision Making at FDA
The
full report can be read at https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/roe-report.pdf
- PDF.
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