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President Obama: Don't Cave in to Bishops

by National Organization for Women

President Obama will soon decide whether to approve a broader refusal clause under the new health care law that would allow organizations to deny contraceptive insurance coverage for their employees on religious or "moral" grounds. Regulations adopted earlier this year already contain a sweeping refusal clause for certain religiously-affiliated non-profits, but the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is pushing for more. Women's rights supporters are sending messages to the president urging him to reject any expansion of refusal clauses that restrict women's access to affordable contraception.

Earlier this year, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommended that health insurance under the Affordable Care Act's Women's Health Amendment include coverage for contraception, with no co-payment requirement or other fees. The IOM asserted that birth control is basic health care and that improved access to birth control is directly linked to declines in maternal and infant mortality, among other benefits.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services accepted the IOM's recommendations and then incorporated these and other recommendations into the interim regulations. Unfortunately, these regulations include an exemption for certain religiously-affiliated non-profit organizations to provide insurance coverage for contraception.

NOW submitted comments to HHS earlier this fall, objecting to any refusal clauses, and we asked our supporters to send their comments to the department. Now we hear that the bishops are pressuring the administration to further expand refusal clauses, and we are very concerned that the president will cave in.

An overwhelming majority of the public, including Catholics, support the requirement that health plans cover contraception, with no co-payment. We know that 98 percent of Catholic women have used birth control and that nearly all sexually-experienced persons have used contraception. The Catholic bishops are wildly out of touch with reality and are acting against basic reproductive health care needs of all women.

Read NOW President Terry O'Neill's open letter to President Obama for further details, and please send the president your views on the need for unrestricted access to contraception under the Affordable Care Act. You can send an email to the White House or you can call with your comments at 202-456-1414. Please take action as soon as possible.

This post is part of the #HERvotes blog carnival. Read more posts from the blog carnival »

Further Information:

NOW's comments to HHS

Contraception: Expand Access, Not Exemptions

Women's Preventive Health Care Services

6 comments » Register or log in to leave a comment. [Log in] [Register...]

Comment from: billywms [Member] Email
Private religious groups should have the right to refuse to cover things they don't agree with,-Freedom of Association see Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group of Boston.-Look,I do believe in birth control but i don't believe in forcing your views on others,If a group does not believe in birth control,They have every right to refuse it if they are not government-funded.-Case Closed.
12/01/11 @ 16:12
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Comment from: billywms [Member] Email
And what you say is misleading,-It's not 98% of catholic women using birth control it's 98% of SEXUALLY ACTIVE catholic women,Huge difference.-In the future,Please don't lie to try & get something you want,okay.
12/01/11 @ 16:16
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Comment from: laurendonna [Member] Email
"The United States is in no sense founded upon the Christian doctrine." ~ George Washington, Treaty of Tripoli.
We are not a theocracy, therefore, religion needs to stay out of politics.
Men have no business making decisions about women's health.
12/06/11 @ 17:50
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Comment from: billywms [Member] Email
No public group is making a decision about women's health,-This is about private groups which DO have a right to cover what they wish,-Freedom Of Association.
12/06/11 @ 19:37
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Comment from: madamab [Member] Email
Billywms - Your argument makes no sense. HHS is a public entity that makes the rules for health care in the United States. The rules apply to every group that sells insurance to women. Therefore, the law applies to all groups, no matter how "religious" they are.

Case closed.
12/06/11 @ 20:22
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Comment from: billywms [Member] Email
My argument is that HHS can't force other PRIVATE insurance companies to cover something if they choose not to,A private group cannot(or should not)be forced to cover types of insurance if they do not wish,-Whatever that may be(Cancer,BC,etc...)-You can't force an insurance company to cover something unless they are publicly funded And seeing as many insurance companies don't receive federal funding,They cannot be forced to cover something they do not wish.

Case closed.
12/06/11 @ 21:06
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