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Related: About this forumExclusion of methods used by men from ACA contraceptive coverage policy is a serious oversight ...
From Guttmacher Inst
Exclusion of methods used by men from ACA contraceptive coverage policy is a serious oversight that must be fixed:
The Affordable Care Acts (ACA) contraceptive coverage guarantee requires most private health plans to cover the full range of contraceptive methods and services without out-of-pocket costs. However, the policy currently excludes vasectomies and male condoms. A new analysis in the Guttmacher Policy Review discusses potential pathways to rectify this serious shortcoming, including state-level actions and new recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF).
Because the section of the ACA under which the contraceptive coverage policy was established refers to preventive care with respect to women, it has been interpreted to exclude methods that are used by men, despite strong evidence that these methods provide preventive health benefits for women by helping them prevent unplanned pregnancies and space wanted ones. The impact is considerable: 15% of women who use contraceptives rely on male condoms as their primary method and 8% rely on their partners vasectomy; in total, about nine million women rely on contraceptive methods used by men.
The exclusion of methods used by men simply makes no sense and benefits no onenot men, not women, not families, not health plans, says Adam Sonfield, author of the new analysis. Instead, it interferes with contraceptive choice and effective use. It creates a financial incentive for couples to choose female tubal ligation over less invasive and less expensive male vasectomy. And it perpetuates the all-too-common view that contraception is solely the womans responsibility.
Sonfield details a number of possible approaches to address this gap, including several that appear unlikely to succeed: Congressa majority of which is hostile to the ACA as a wholecould amend the law, or the administration could reverse itself and revise its now long-standing regulations. Other approaches, even if they succeed, may be limited in their potential impact, such as individual health plans deciding on their own or under public pressure to cover these methods and exempt them from copayments and deductibles.
In a somewhat more promising approach, state policymakers could expand the ACA provision to include methods used by men. This would be a piecemeal solution, affecting only some private health plans in some states. Nevertheless, such requirements could have far-reaching ripple effects over time.
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Exclusion of methods used by men from ACA contraceptive coverage policy is a serious oversight ... (Original Post)
Panich52
Jun 2015
OP
Novara
(5,843 posts)1. Well, the argument isn't strong
Condoms are OTC - no one needs a prescription or to see a doctor for them, so it really isn't technically healthcare (some birth control is prescribed for healthcare reasons and not birth control). And does the ACA pay for tubal ligations? No? Then it shouldn't pay for vasectomies. I assume both are covered, but co-pays or whatever apply, which is appropriate, I think.
It really isn't appropriate to compare comdoms with the type of birth control you have to get through a doctor.