• As of 1 August 2011, female contraception was added to a list of preventive services covered by the ACA that would be provided without patient co-payment. (wikipedia.org)
  • Despite the Affordable Care Act's guarantees for free contraception coverage, Force's experience illustrates that even for women whose health plans are subject to the law's requirements, obtaining the right product at no cost can be onerous. (npr.org)
  • Washington, DC (July 8, 2020) - The American College of Physicians (ACP) strongly objects to today's U.S. Supreme Court decision that supports the Trump administration rule that allow employers to decline to cover medically accepted contraception as part of the health insurance plan they provide to their employees. (acponline.org)
  • It interferes with patient autonomy in an individual health matter, by not covering medically accepted forms of contraception. (acponline.org)
  • The Affordable Care Act designated that contraception be covered as a preventive service without any patient cost-sharing because it's just good medicine. (acponline.org)
  • The Military Health System offers service members and their families contraceptive care services-including access to all forms of medical and surgical contraception-for men and women. (health.mil)
  • Q: On Contraception: Should employers be able to withhold contraceptive coverage from employees if they disagree with it morally? (issues2000.org)
  • These interest groups continue to insist that an employer's religious objection to contraception (including that of an individual business owner) should receive absolute deference, notwithstanding the conscience rights, health care needs or even legal entitlements of their employees. (guttmacher.org)
  • It was the Catholic Church, more specifically the U.S. Catholic bishops' conference, that largely engineered Hobby Lobby to block the legitimization of contraception as a standard health insurance benefit-a last ditch effort to prevent by law what it couldn't prevent from the pulpit: women from using birth control. (salon.com)
  • When charges that contraceptives were abortifacients failed to halt the measure, the bishops turned to a new tack: claiming that contraception equity laws violated the religious freedom of insurers and employers who disapproved of contraception and would be forced to subsidize its use. (salon.com)
  • Research shows that expanded access to preventive care and coverage has led to an increase in colon cancer screenings, vaccinations, use of contraception and chronic disease screenings. (wfdd.org)
  • Mr. Kelley is also a Christian," and is unwilling to purchase health insurance plans that subsidize certain types of contraception or PrEP drugs "that encourage homosexual behavior and intravenous drug use. (wfdd.org)
  • The furor surrounding the Health and Human Services (HHS) mandate affords us an opportunity to reexamine the Church's teaching on contraception. (diocesecc.org)
  • Currently, the services informed by the WPSI guidelines are covered without cost sharing under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) 1 resulting in a range of preventive services available to women, including contraception, counseling for sexually transmitted infections (STI), and screening for interpersonal violence (IPV), among others. (ahrq.gov)
  • Telehealth services have been offered for contraception 15 to facilitate access for more geographically distant patients. (ahrq.gov)
  • The block on the contraception mandate applies to the nuns and other Roman Catholic nonprofit groups that use the Christian Brothers Employee Benefit Trust health plan. (beckershospitalreview.com)
  • This decision is the first one in which the Court has ruled in favor of a for-profit company presenting a case to defend religious freedom, and deals a blow to the Obama Administration's signature legislation, taking away a fundamental element of the mandate that employer health plans cover certain types of contraception at no cost to the employee. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • KAISER HEALTH NEWS - In a 5-4 decision Monday, the Supreme Court allowed a key exemption to the health law's contraception coverage requirements when it ruled that closely held, for-profit businesses could assert a religious objection to the Obama administration's regulations. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • Q: What does the health law say about contraception coverage? (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • A: As part of the law's coverage of preventive health services, health insurance plans are required to cover all FDA-approved contraception methods for women without any cost-sharing, such as deductibles or co-payments. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services set the contraception requirement based on an Institute of Medicine study that recommended prescription contraception and services, including all FDA-approved methods of contraception, be included as preventive services for women. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • Grandfathered plans that had not changed significantly after the health law passed do not have to offer preventive health care - including contraception - without cost-sharing. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • A: Hobby Lobby and Conestoga are family owned, and they said that the health law's contraception requirement violated their religious views . (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • Coverages for non-communicable diseases and health promotion services are the lowest, while the coverage for communicable disease control interventions is the highest although progress has been made in recent decades in the area of contraception, contraceptive use remains low in sub-Saharan Africa. (who.int)
  • A contraceptive mandate is a government regulation or law that requires health insurers, or employers that provide their employees with health insurance, to cover some contraceptive costs in their health insurance plans. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Court's decision will impact "closely held" for-profit employers with "sincerely held" religious objections to certain contraceptives, and the insurers and third-party administrators ("TPAs") that work with such employers. (quarles.com)
  • However, note that the Court's Hobby Lobby decision does not strike the ACA in its entirety, or mean that all for-profit employers can now ignore the contraceptive mandate (or any other ACA requirement). (quarles.com)
  • The three federal agencies that enforce the contraceptive mandate previously issued an exemption for religious employers, such as churches. (quarles.com)
  • To accommodate certain nonprofit religious employers, the agencies issued additional final regulations on July 2, 2013, under which contraceptive coverage is to be provided for employees of nonprofit religious employers with no involvement required by the employer and at no cost to the employer or the employee (called an "accommodation" under the final regulations). (quarles.com)
  • In enacting the ACA, Congress required large employers to provide basic preventive care for employees. (kcur.org)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced last week it would give employers more flexibility to no longer offer contraceptives through their health insurance plans based on religious grounds. (abcactionnews.com)
  • After an outcry that the exemptions didn't go far enough, Obama announced that church-affiliated schools, universities, hospitals and charities also would not have to provide or pay for contraceptive coverage, 'but their female employees could obtain such coverage directly from the employers' insurance companies at no cost," the New York Times wrote. (politifact.com)
  • Meanwhile, the Senate voted March 1, 2012, to uphold Obama's contraceptive policy and kill the Republican effort to let employers and insurers deny coverage on religious grounds. (politifact.com)
  • Under the rule, women will still have access to free preventive care that includes contraceptive services -- no matter where they work," Obama said Friday in a special White House news conference held in the wake of a controversy over his administration's earlier rule ordering all employers except houses of worship to provide the coverage. (jta.org)
  • The Catholic bishops' interest in "conscience clauses" that would allow employers to opt out of reproductive health care services began in earnest in the late 1990s, with the increased viability at the state and national levels of contraceptive equity measures designed to ensure that health plans covered prescription contraceptives like the Pill just like other prescription medications. (salon.com)
  • Measures to ensure contraceptive equity had been stalled by male legislators and social conservatives who asserted that employers and insurers shouldn't be forced to pay for what they called a "lifestyle" choice, not a health care need. (salon.com)
  • It details objections to the Affordable Care Act's requirement that employers cover contraceptives in their employee health plans despite their moral objections to such coverage. (catholiccourier.com)
  • A combined lawsuit, Zubik v. Burwell, made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, where the justices in May 2016 unanimously returned the case to the lower courts with instructions to determine if contraceptive insurance coverage could be obtained by employees through their insurance companies without directly involving religious employers who object to paying for such coverage. (catholiccourier.com)
  • No one really knows how many employers will deny contraceptive coverage to their employees as a result of this week's ruling. (populationinstitute.org)
  • One of the most controversial provisions of the ACA requires that all non-grandfathered or non-exempt employers provide employees with coverage for women's "preventive care. (ssrn.com)
  • More specifically, courts denying for-profit employers injunctive relief from the mandate have found that the burden imposed in requiring employers to pay for contraceptive coverage "is too attenuated to be considered substantial. (ssrn.com)
  • The exemption provided for "religious employers" fails to cover most faith-based organizations, including Catholic hospitals, universities and service organizations like Catholic Charities that serve millions every year. (diocesecc.org)
  • Under the Act's mandate for including "preventive services" in most health plans, HHS and two other federal agencies are requiring most employers, including Catholic and private organizations, to fund and facilitate sterilization, contraceptives and abortifacients against their conscience. (usccb.org)
  • While both employers' health plans cover some forms of birth control, the employers object to emergency contraceptives such as Plan B and Ella that can prevent a pregnancy if taken within a short window after unprotected sex. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • Women can also get a range of services, from birth control pills, IUDs, hormonal shots, and slow-release hormonal rods, which go under the skin, and permanent surgical sterilization (this is available for men, too). (health.mil)
  • Those guidelines say women should have access without cost sharing to a list that covers the 18 FDA-approved methods , including oral contraceptives, vaginal rings, cervical caps, IUDs, implantable rods and sterilization. (ksmu.org)
  • The health care law requires most insurers to cover preventive services for free, including birth control drugs and devices, as well as sterilization procedures. (politifact.com)
  • The Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 2012 , introduced by Ohio Rep. Steve Chabot in February, says no government regulations may 'require any individual or entity to offer, provide, or purchase coverage for a contraceptive or sterilization service, or related education or counseling. (politifact.com)
  • The OU said it read the new rule as meaning that "no nonprofit, religious institutional employer that objects to providing contraceptives and sterilization services will have to pay for or provide coverage for it" and that "no objecting religious employer will be required to make referrals for services to which they object. (jta.org)
  • While the ACA itself did not specify the content of this "preventive care" coverage, however, subsequent regulation issued by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) directed that it must include, "[a]ll Food and Drug Administration [(FDA)] approved contraceptive methods, sterilization procedures, and patient education and counseling for all women with reproductive capacity" (the HHS mandate or mandate), unless an employer is willing to suffer severe economic penalties. (ssrn.com)
  • The HHS mandate effectively forces nearly all private health plans to provide coverage for any FDA-approved prescription contraceptive drugs and devices, including surgical sterilization. (diocesecc.org)
  • Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: Amending chapter 182-532 WAC , Reproductive health/family planning only/ TAKE CHARGE and related sections, WAC 182-531-1550 Sterilization physician-related services, 182-531-0150 Noncovered physician-related and health care professional services -- General and administrative, and 182-531-0200 Physician-related and health care professional services requiring prior authorization. (wa.gov)
  • Sterilization of surgical instruments was unsatisfactory at most health units. (who.int)
  • Courts should recognize that emergency contraceptives and IUD's are not "abortifacients" for purpose of any federal or state law dealing with "abortion. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • Does TRICARE cover emergency contraceptives? (health.mil)
  • American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists' Committee on Health Care for Underserved Women. (cdc.gov)
  • Cost to the user is one factor preventing many US women from using more effective contraceptives. (wikipedia.org)
  • For Stephanie Force, finding a birth control method that she likes and can get without paying out of pocket has been a struggle, despite the Affordable Care Act's promise of free contraceptives for women and adolescent girls in most health plans. (npr.org)
  • Consumer advocates who have studied the issue say a process is spelled out in federal rules for women to get the contraceptives they need, but far too few people know that's an option. (npr.org)
  • The Court expressed two alternatives that HHS could implement to provide contraceptives at no cost to women who are unable to obtain coverage for contraceptives under employer-provided health coverage due to an employer's religious objections. (quarles.com)
  • The government could assume the cost of providing the contraceptives at issue for affected women. (quarles.com)
  • The organization said Bentley's effort penalizes low-income women who seek contraceptive and preventative health care services at the clinics. (ksl.com)
  • The ACA requires most commercial health plans to cover a comprehensive list of Food and Drug Administration-approved methods without charging women anything. (ksmu.org)
  • But to punish a private organization that works to give women a full array of reproductive health care is really, I think, a very sorry idea. (ontheissues.org)
  • This report can assist primary care providers in offering family planning services that will help women, men, and couples achieve their desired number and spacing of children and increase the likelihood that those children are born healthy. (cdc.gov)
  • The report provides recommendations for how to help prevent and achieve pregnancy, emphasizes offering a full range of contraceptive methods for persons seeking to prevent pregnancy, highlights the special needs of adolescent clients, and encourages the use of the family planning visit to provide selected preventive health services for women, in accordance with the recommendations for women issued by the Institute of Medicine and adopted by HHS. (cdc.gov)
  • providing sexually transmitted disease (STD) screening and treatment services to prevent tubal infertility and improve the health of women, men, and infants. (cdc.gov)
  • This study aimed to identify the geospatial variations and determinants affecting the utilization of contraceptives among married reproductive age women in Ethiopia. (frontiersin.org)
  • The study revealed that contraceptive usage among married women is comparatively low, with wide regional variation. (frontiersin.org)
  • Hadassah in a statement welcomed Obama's "reaffirmation" of his earlier commitment to access to contraceptives for all women and added: "We will, however, watch closely to ensure that the new proposal does not create undue barriers to women's access to contraceptives. (jta.org)
  • Jewish Women International praised the compromise and said it would work to make sure it "does not place any additional burdens on women and their fundamental right to contraceptive coverage. (jta.org)
  • NCJW said it was "optimistic" that the new plan "protects the health needs and individual religious liberty of all women. (jta.org)
  • Rabbis in our community offer private and compassionate pastoral care to women who seek out their spiritual guidance on a range of matters related to their reproductive health and pregnancy-related care, including abortion, thereby enabling a woman to consider the rich teachings of the Jewish tradition while making her own private moral decision. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • Affirming that we trust women to make their own decisions about their reproductive lives, and for women who seek assistance in making difficult reproductive health decisions, JCPA supports the full and unfettered access to confidential and affordable spiritual, religious, mental health, and accurate medical guidance. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • We support efforts to strengthen and safeguard the spirit and impact of Roe v. Wade, including private choices by women of all ages, incomes, geographic regions, citizenship or immigration status, and sources of insurance and their equal access to high quality, safe, private, confidential and comprehensive reproductive health services. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • Access to comprehensive, unbiased, medically accurate sexuality and reproductive health education, information and services should be expanded so that women and young people know their reproductive health care options and are able to decide the best option for themselves in consultation with their health care provider. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • Whether the bishops and their allies in other social conservative organizations will prevail with regard to contraceptive insurance coverage for women in the United States remains to be seen. (guttmacher.org)
  • Under its health insurance plan, Respondent A covers numerous medical treatments and services, including prescription drugs, vaccinations, preventive medical care for children and adults, including pap smears and routine mammograms for women, and preventive dental care. (reproductiverights.org)
  • Access to comprehensive, affordable, and high quality care is essential for women to address their health care needs - which change across their lifespans. (kff.org)
  • Now all plans must include maternity benefits, are barred from gender rating where women are charged more than men for the same plan, and must cover, without cost sharing, recommended preventive services such as contraceptives. (kff.org)
  • For these women in particular, access to health care is an essential and ongoing concern. (kff.org)
  • The share of women with health coverage has increased since the ACA was implemented, but one in ten women remain uninsured. (kff.org)
  • The Kaiser Women's Health Survey finds that approximately one in ten (12%) non-elderly adult women report being uninsured in 2017, down from 18% in 2013 ( Figure 1 ). (kff.org)
  • Despite that fact that nearly all women use contraceptives at some point in their lives-98 percent, according to government surveys-and that at any given moment two-thirds of women of child-bearing age are using a contraceptive method, the implication was that fertility management was frivolous or immoral and that "other people" shouldn't be forced to pay for it. (salon.com)
  • Ensuring women veterans receive veterans' benefits and services that honor their brave military service is one of the VFW's top priorities. (vfw.org)
  • After analyzing survey responses and direct feedback from nearly 2,000 women veterans, the VFW has identified multiple recommendations to improve VA health care, outreach, training and homeless programs. (vfw.org)
  • The overwhelming majority of women veterans want VA to expand access to women-specific health care, which includes hiring more VA health care professionals who are able to identify and treat their unique health care needs. (vfw.org)
  • More specifically, women veterans want the opportunity to receive their health care from women health care providers. (vfw.org)
  • This would ensure all women veterans have access to health care professionals with specialized women's health care training. (vfw.org)
  • The VFW has also urged VA to allow all women veterans to choose the gender of their health care provider. (vfw.org)
  • Women veterans who use VA health care for family planning services are also concerned that VA requires copayments for preventative prescription drugs, such as contraceptives. (vfw.org)
  • The VFW also found that older women veterans were less likely to use their earned benefits and services compared to their younger counterparts, despite being equally as likely to be eligible or need such benefits and services. (vfw.org)
  • The VFW has urged VA to conduct targeted outreach to older women veterans who may not be aware of the veterans' benefits and services VA provides. (vfw.org)
  • Based on data available for 910 of those 981 sites, we estimate that these changes reduced the network's capacity to provide women with contraceptive services by at least 46%, translating to roughly 1.6 million patients. (guttmacher.org)
  • Most women with employer-based health insurance will gain access to no-cost preventive care in the new year. (americanprogress.org)
  • Many women have already seen their health insurance improve under the act, and many more will benefit when the law becomes fully operational in 2014. (americanprogress.org)
  • Most women with employer-sponsored health insurance, therefore, will gain access to these services on January 1, 2013. (americanprogress.org)
  • Fifty-two percent of women report delaying needed medical care because of cost, and 32 percent of women report giving up basic necessities to pay for health care expenses. (americanprogress.org)
  • Approximately 47 million women will obtain no-cost preventive services under this law. (americanprogress.org)
  • Below are a set of resources explaining the regulation of preventive services, how women stand to benefit from it, and what's at stake. (americanprogress.org)
  • The policy making process which took place between 1991 and 1996 illustrates that a political consensus on the definition of women's health and the strategies needed to improve the health status of Yemeni women could not be achieved. (yementimes.com)
  • As mentioned above, the improvement of the social, economical and health status of Yemeni women was central to the National Population Strategy endorsed by the government in 1991. (yementimes.com)
  • In the National Health Conference of 1994 and the document issued thereafter, the limited participation of women in health, social and economic development was described as an important factor influencing negatively their health status. (yementimes.com)
  • To ameliorate this, I decided to focus on providing women and shelters in my community with a concise list of local health clinics, along with additional information about contraceptives and services offered. (gofundme.com)
  • Women religious demonstrate against the Affordable Care Act's contraceptive mandate outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington in 2016. (catholiccourier.com)
  • Immigrant women also face gaps in use of sexual and reproductive health services. (yubanet.com)
  • Only half of immigrant women at risk of unintended pregnancy have received contraceptive care in the previous year, compared to two-thirds of U.S.-born women. (yubanet.com)
  • Evidence also suggests that immigrant women are less likely to receive other preventive services, such as Pap tests and hepatitis B vaccinations. (yubanet.com)
  • The ACA birth control benefit provides expanded contraceptive coverage with no out-of-pocket costs to more than 62 million women , including 17 million Latinas and 15 million Black women. (populationinstitute.org)
  • One-third of the wage gains women have made since the 1960's can be attributed to increased access to oral contraceptives. (populationinstitute.org)
  • Fifty-eight percent of women who use oral contraceptive in the U.S. rely on the pill, at least in part, for medical purposes other than birth control. (populationinstitute.org)
  • For these women, losing insurance coverage for oral contraceptives hurts their ability to manage medical issues such as endometriosis and polycystic ovarian syndrome. (populationinstitute.org)
  • Eighty-two percent of Americans surveyed believe that women should be able to have birth control coverage through their health insurance, regardless of their employer's moral objections. (populationinstitute.org)
  • These are euphemistically listed among "preventive services for women" that all health plans will have to cover without co-pays or cost sharing. (diocesecc.org)
  • Given all of the various woes that have resulted as a direct response to the widespread use of contraceptives, it should be readily acknowledged that contraceptive practices serve only to separate men and women and place them in opposition to their very nature as fecund beings. (diocesecc.org)
  • Those insurance plans must provide (with no co-pay) the full range of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved contraceptive methods for women. (catholicphilly.com)
  • Philip Rovner in the same issue of the Wall Street Journal sums it up this way: "The … premise in favor of the birth-control mandate is based on [its] being 'essential to the health of women and families. (catholicphilly.com)
  • I assume such items as food, housing, clothing and transportation are 'essential to the health of women and families,' as well. (catholicphilly.com)
  • As a reminder, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ("PPACA") requires non-grandfathered group health plans to provide recommended preventive care for women, including contraceptive coverage, without cost-sharing. (sgrlaw.com)
  • Implementation of these services is guided by health equity to ensure "quality preventive health care for women at every stage of life. (ahrq.gov)
  • Traditionally, preventive services for women are either integrated into well woman visits 6 , 7 focusing on screening and prevention, or offered opportunistically in the context of managing health conditions. (ahrq.gov)
  • 29 Yet, research has not definitively addressed whether telehealth increases access to care nor whether it results in similar or better outcomes compared with in-person care for reproductive health and IPV in women. (ahrq.gov)
  • 29-32 The pandemic has highlighted existing health disparities and placed a spotlight on a concerning rise in incidence of IPV against women and girls. (ahrq.gov)
  • Adding mammograms for women thirty-nine years of age and younger with prior authorization and mammograms for men when medically necessary in reproductive health services. (wa.gov)
  • As this bill criminalizes the practice of abortion, it deters providers from providing this service to patients that seek it, causing an access issue for women and potentially life-threatening health issues for these patients seeking treatment. (cohealthinitiative.org)
  • This bill poses a threat to Coloradans' health because it could potentially limit access for women to get care at places that also provide abortions. (cohealthinitiative.org)
  • A: The court's majority said that the companies that filed suit - Hobby Lobby Stores, a nationwide chain of 500 arts-and-crafts stores, and Conestoga Wood Specialties, a custom cabinet manufacturer - did not have to offer women employees all Food and Drug Administration-approved contraceptives as part of a package of preventive services that must be covered without copays or deductibles under the law. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • The contraceptive guidelines apply to women only. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • It will assist the Government and CSOs (includes NGOs, CBOs and other civil society actors), and the private sector, under public-private partnership arrangements, in the implementation of the BPHS & EPHS, with a focus on strengthened capacity to deliver quality health and nutrition services, especially to women and children, psychosocial services to victims of Gender Based Violence, and services for persons with disabilities, including at the community level. (who.int)
  • We conducted a comparative effectiveness review on the effectiveness and harms of telehealth interventions for women 's reproductive health and intimate partner violence (IPV) services. (bvsalud.org)
  • We searched MEDLINE , Cochrane Library , CINAHL, and Scopus for English- language studies (July 2016 to May 2022) for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies of telehealth strategies for women 's reproductive health and IPV versus usual care. (bvsalud.org)
  • Effective approaches for delivering these services and how to best mobilize telehealth, particularly for women facing barriers to care remain uncertain. (bvsalud.org)
  • I'd like to welcome you to today's COCA call, Updated Interim Zika Clinical Guidance for Pregnant Women in Data on Contraceptive Use to Decrease Zika-Affected Pregnancy. (cdc.gov)
  • 1. Women's health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being of women throughout their lifespan and not only their reproductive health. (who.int)
  • This consists of health system responsiveness to the needs of women, education of the girl-child, quality health care, elimination of gender discrimination and harmful traditional practices, and an appreciation of the role of women in sustaining human life. (who.int)
  • It addresses the health conditions that are specific to or more prevalent in women, have severe consequences and imply certain risk factors. (who.int)
  • According to World Health Organisation (WHO) report 8 , the global teenage pregnancy rate was projected to be 54 births per 1000 women for 2000-2005 periods. (bvsalud.org)
  • On average, fewer than one in two pregnant women in Africa give birth in the presence of skilled health personnel, and only 12% of those who need emergency care for themselves and their newborns actually receive it. (who.int)
  • Across countries, the median contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) among women of reproductive age was just 28% in 2017. (who.int)
  • Recent evidence indicates that increasing the frequency of antenatal visits in the health system for women and adolescents is associated with a lower likelihood of stillbirths, as these visits provide more opportunities to detect and manage potential problems. (who.int)
  • This explanation is supported by the increase in pigmentation (ie, melasma ) seen in women who are pregnant or taking oral contraceptive pills and by in vitro studies demonstrating an increase in melanin synthesis by melanocytes treated with estrogen. (medscape.com)
  • it was also planned to raise the contraceptive prevalence to 35% by the year 2000 (CSO 1992c: 22). (yementimes.com)
  • Military service members "may be at greater risk for developing dementia due to a higher prevalence of traumatic brain injury, posttraumatic stress disorder, and depression," according to a 2019 National Institutes of Health study the Department of Defense supported. (health.mil)
  • A RHC is a contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR), and deliveries by second-level healthcare facility that serves a population skilled birth attendants (SBA) ( 2,4-7 ). (who.int)
  • The eight social and economic variables used in this study are: GDP per capita, GINI index, Female Literacy rate, Health expenditure, Unemployed female rate, Gender equality, Contraceptive prevalence and urban population rate. (bvsalud.org)
  • Independent t-test revealed that in countries where teenage pregnancy rate is high, Literacy rate, contraceptive prevalence rate and Healthcare expenditure rate was low. (bvsalud.org)
  • Spearman correlation indicated that female literacy rate, Healthcare expenditure, GDP per capita and Contraceptive prevalence had a significant inverse relationship with teenage pregnancy rate. (bvsalud.org)
  • Additionally, an increase in female literacy rate would concurrently increase Contraceptive prevalence rate. (bvsalud.org)
  • TRICARE covers a full range of contraceptive methods, regardless of which health plan you have. (health.mil)
  • The Population Action Plan of 1991 intended to expand preventive and curative maternal health services to rural areas. (yementimes.com)
  • It will also provide support to increased coverage of quality safe and drinking water and sanitation and increased access to and utilization of quality preventive and curative nutrition services, provided at community level and through health facilities. (who.int)
  • Primary health care services to promote the mental and physical health of communities include preventive, promotive, curative, general hygiene, and nutritional elements. (who.int)
  • Primary healthcare services include preventive, (MICS) 2017-2018 showed that overall, 7.5% of children promotive, curative, general hygiene, and nutritional were wasted, 2% were overweight, and 21.2% were elements to promote the mental and physical health of a underweight in Punjab ( 2,5-8 ). (who.int)
  • Particular attention must be paid to early childhood services such as vaccination, growth development, but also curative care. (who.int)
  • In fact, 9 out of 10 facilities offer the three essential preventive and curative care services for children under five. (who.int)
  • Committee opinion no. 672: clinical challenges of long-acting reversible contraceptive methods. (cdc.gov)
  • Making contraceptives available without a copay increases use of highly effective methods, reduces unintended pregnancies, and may be instrumental in achieving the Healthy People 2020 goal. (wikipedia.org)
  • Insurers sometimes don't cover certain contraceptive methods for free, though they are supposed to cover most by law. (npr.org)
  • New types of contraceptives aren't automatically incorporated into the federal list of required methods that insurers use to guide coverage decisions. (npr.org)
  • In addition, some health plans continue to discourage use of even long-established methods, like IUDs, by requiring providers to get approval from the plan before prescribing them. (npr.org)
  • That turned out to include all 20 contraceptive methods approved by the Food and Drug Administration. (kcur.org)
  • The Bernoulli model was used by applying Kulldorff methods using the SaTScan software to analyze the purely spatial clusters of contraceptive usage. (frontiersin.org)
  • In August 2011, the Obama administration formally accepted the recommendation of an Institute of Medicine expert panel that contraceptive counseling and methods be included in a select set of women's preventive health services that, under the Affordable Care Act, automatically would be covered in most private insurance plans without additional cost-sharing beginning in August 2012. (guttmacher.org)
  • In the "Shari'a Guidelines for Family Planning Methods" the argument linking women's health to an improvement of their social status was turned upside down. (yementimes.com)
  • Under the PPACA, all group health plans and health insurance issuers must provide, without cost-sharing, reproductive preventive care including all FDA-approved contraceptive methods and services, as well as patient education and counseling. (beckershospitalreview.com)
  • The owners contend that these contraceptive methods prevent a fertilized egg from implanting in the woman's uterus and therefore are a type of abortion. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • All per- continuation of contraceptive methods is sonnel involved in family planning projects one of the main indicators of quality of us- are aware that to attract new users, they age. (who.int)
  • Zahedan has a population of ap- tinuation of contraceptive methods. (who.int)
  • About 60% of in Egypt revealed that the continuation rate the people use contraceptive methods. (who.int)
  • of contraceptive methods was 88% for the Family planning indices in this province are first 6-months, 75% for 12-months and lower than for the country as a whole. (who.int)
  • And TRICARE patients who are referred to civilian providers will no longer have to pay cost-shares or copayments for any TRICARE-covered reversible medical contraceptives, she added. (health.mil)
  • You no longer have to pay cost-shares or copayments for all TRICARE-covered reversible medical contraceptives. (health.mil)
  • You have to figure nobody was much happier than E.J. Dionne when the Obama administration released a "compromise" on its insurance coverage mandate for contraceptive services that Sr. Carol Keehan, head of the Catholic Health Association, could support. (washingtonmonthly.com)
  • Plaintiff John Kelley, an orthodontist who lives in Tarrant County, Texas, "has no desire to purchase health insurance that includes contraceptive coverage because his wife is past her child-bearing years," according to the complaint . (wfdd.org)
  • The companies had argued that several types of contraceptives violate their owners' religious beliefs. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • After the ACA passed in 2010, the federal Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) developed guidelines for women's preventive services. (ksmu.org)
  • In 2016, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) partnered with the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) under a cooperative agreement to support the Women's Preventive Services Initiative (WPSI) to develop evidence-based guidelines for women's preventive health care services. (ahrq.gov)
  • The Guttmacher Institute said that even before the federal mandate was implemented, twenty-eight states had their own mandates that required health insurance to cover prescription contraceptives, but the federal mandate innovated by forbidding insurance companies from charging part of the cost to the patient. (wikipedia.org)
  • The following Commission Decision finds reasonable cause to believe that discrimination occured under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, in two charges challenging the exclusion of prescription contraceptives from a health insurance plan. (reproductiverights.org)
  • is concerned about attempts to redefine certain well-accepted contraceptive medications and devices as abortifacients. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • The bishops and social conservatives worked furiously to derail the measure by claiming that it would force health plans to cover abortifacients-which they now defined as anything that worked post-fertilization. (salon.com)
  • Representatives Christopher Smith (R-NJ), who had a track record of introducing legislation favored by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), and Tom Coburn (R-OK) tried unsuccessfully to insert a provision prohibiting "coverage for abortifacients," claiming that newly approved emergency contraceptive pills and the intrauterine device were abortifacients because they could prevent a fertilized egg from implanting. (salon.com)
  • The waiving of cost-shares and copayments for certain contraceptive services is one way we're making it easier for you to get the care you need. (health.mil)
  • In April 2014, CDC published "Providing Quality Family Planning Services: Recommendations of CDC and the U.S. Office of Population Affairs" (QFP), which describes the scope of services that should be offered in a family planning visit and how to provide those services (e.g., periodicity of screening, which persons are in need of services, etc.) ( 1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • The contraceptive clinic opened June 7 to service beneficiaries and provide same-day procedures without a referral. (health.mil)
  • This time the issue is whether for-profit corporations, citing religious objections, may refuse to provide some, or potentially all, contraceptive services in health plans offered to employees. (kcur.org)
  • The only government action here is the government action that forces the Greens to provide these contraceptive devices that they find morally objectionable, he says. (kcur.org)
  • Amends the definition of the term "targeted low-income child" to provide that such term includes the period from conception to birth, for eligibility for child health assistance. (ontheissues.org)
  • The recommendations outline how to provide quality family planning services, which include contraceptive services, pregnancy testing and counseling, helping clients achieve pregnancy, basic infertility services, preconception health services, and sexually transmitted disease services. (cdc.gov)
  • After repealing health care law, will 'enact into law conscience protections for health care providers, including doctors, nurses, and hospitals,' such as allowing them to decline to provide abortion services. (politifact.com)
  • A bill that passed the House on May 4, 2011, would provide conscience protections for people and entities that choose not to provide abortion services. (politifact.com)
  • It also includes provisions that government agencies and programs 'may not subject any individual or institutional health care entity to discrimination on the basis that the health care entity does not provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer for abortions. (politifact.com)
  • We support adequately funded and fully accessible family planning programs that provide comprehensive and medically accurate reproductive and sexual health education and the full range of health care services, including birth control and abortion services. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • Under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), organizations receiving U.S. government funds for the prevention of the sexual transmission of HIV may not only refuse on religious or moral grounds to directly provide condoms (or any other service to which they object), but they may also withhold information about condoms and refuse to refer clients to other programs through which condoms may be obtained. (guttmacher.org)
  • The Kaiser Family Foundation has conducted the Kaiser Women's Health Survey approximately every four years since 2001 to provide a look into the range of women's health care experiences, especially those that are not typically addressed by most surveys. (kff.org)
  • Are you a General Practitioner or a Nurse Practitioner eligible to provide general, physical and sexual health services through the Medicare Benefits Schedule? (headspace.org.au)
  • It would leave in place the religious accommodation created by President Barack Obama's administration for nonprofit religious entities such as church-run colleges and social service agencies that are morally opposed to contraceptive coverage and can file a form or notify HHS that they will not provide it. (catholiccourier.com)
  • By undermining immigrants' ability to obtain affordable health insurance, the public charge rule contradicts Medicaid's central objective to provide coverage of and access to needed health care services. (yubanet.com)
  • The Affordable Care Act has survived many challenges in court, but the case of Kelley v. Becerra - now before a federal judge in Texas - threatens to undermine one of the most popular provisions in the law, which requires most health plans to provide coverage for preventive care with no copays. (wfdd.org)
  • Under the ACA, most private health plans are required to provide birth control and family planning counseling at no additional cost," according to an HHS release . (wfdd.org)
  • The ACA requires health insurers to provide preventive health services and screenings for patients at no cost. (populationinstitute.org)
  • A similar accommodation was made for religiously-affiliated institutions, like schools and hospitals, that allowed them to refuse to pay for birth control coverage, but in those cases, the organization's health care insurer, not the employer, had to provide coverage for contraceptives at no cost to the student or employee. (populationinstitute.org)
  • If the group health plans sponsored by these organizations are fully-insured, the insurers will provide individual insurance policies for contraceptive coverage, which is paid for by the insurance company at no cost to the individual. (sgrlaw.com)
  • If the group health plan is self-insured, the proposed regulations offer different alternatives, including requiring the third-party administrator to provide contraceptive coverage through individual insurance coverage that is funded by user fees required under the health exchanges. (sgrlaw.com)
  • The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic led to rapid adoption of telehealth as a strategy to provide health services while reducing the risk of coronavirus exposure. (ahrq.gov)
  • CDC and the Office of Population Affairs developed QFP recommendations by conducting an extensive review of published evidence, seeking expert opinion, and synthesizing existing clinical recommendations from CDC, agencies such as the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), and professional medical associations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics. (cdc.gov)
  • These are the standards of practice of the major health care provider associations in the United States, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Pharmacists Association and the American Academy of Physician Assistants (see "Rights vs. Responsibilities: Professional Standards and Provider Refusals," August 2005). (guttmacher.org)
  • The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has recommended preventive health care schedules for children who have no significant health problems and who are growing and developing normally. (msdmanuals.com)
  • ACP also strongly believes that all patients should have access to evidence-based preventive health care services. (acponline.org)
  • When the ACA was written, Congress empowered several groups to use their expertise to identify evidence-based preventive services. (wfdd.org)
  • In a statement, Anthem says, "Anthem health plans cover 222 contraceptive products at $0 cost share on our ACA Preventive List. (npr.org)
  • The ACA requires that non-grandfathered health plans cover certain preventive services without cost-sharing. (quarles.com)
  • But the federal rules do not require health plans to cover every single contraceptive. (ksmu.org)
  • Some institutions manage their own health care plans, they said, making it difficult for them to bring third parties in to cover contraceptives. (jta.org)
  • But the decision of most health insurers to cover Viagra almost immediately after it was approved by the FDA in 1998 largely negated this argument. (salon.com)
  • The sponsors retooled the bill and reintroduced it as a measure that required insurance plans participating in the health insurance program for federal employees to cover contraceptives. (salon.com)
  • Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston said in an op-ed piece in The Hill Aug. 3 that the mandate, which requires most employer-offered health insurance programs to cover contraceptive and abortion-inducing drugs and devices, "has tested this country's commitment to a healthy pluralism. (catholiccourier.com)
  • Some object to paying for health insurance plans that cover contraceptives, PrEP drugs, or other preventive care services that may violate their religious beliefs. (wfdd.org)
  • Plaintiffs also object for economic reasons, arguing that the mandate to cover preventive services raises the price of insurance coverage. (wfdd.org)
  • The case involves the owners of a 500-store retail chain who have argued the mandate would require them to cover some contraceptive services for their employees that prevent not just fertilization but implantation, which the company equates with abortion. (beckershospitalreview.com)
  • Even if they didn't directly fund contraceptive services, they still oppose authorizing someone else to cover birth control. (beckershospitalreview.com)
  • Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) also can't refuse to cover you or charge you more because of your pre-existing condition. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Health plans must cover certain types of care to adults and children without charging you a copayment or coinsurance. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Essential health benefits are 10 types of services that health insurance plans must cover. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Some plans cover more services, others may vary a bit by state. (medlineplus.gov)
  • For sustainable development, these services must cover all the populations, irrespective of their needs and locations. (who.int)
  • In Hobby Lobby , the Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that, as applied to certain closely held corporations, the HHS regulations imposing the contraceptive mandate violate RFRA because the government failed to meet the "least-restrictive-means" standard under RFRA. (quarles.com)
  • Plaintiffs in the Texas case argue that the preventive care mandates violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act . (wfdd.org)
  • As Medscape Medical News first reported in August, the class action suit ( Kelly vs Azar ) has a broader goal - to dismantle the Affordable Care Act using the argument that many of the preventive services it covers, including PrEP, violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act . (medscape.com)
  • Increasing use of highly effective contraceptives could help meet the goal set forward in Healthy People 2020 to decrease unintended pregnancy by 10% before 2020. (wikipedia.org)
  • Charging Parties both allege that Respondents' failure to offer coverage for prescription contraceptive drugs and devices constitutes discrimination on the bases of sex and pregnancy in violation of Title VII. (reproductiverights.org)
  • For pregnancy services, click here . (archny.org)
  • Dr. Oduyebo is also involved with the US Zika Pregnancy Registry, and provides technical assistance to support state, tribal, local and territorial health departments collecting information about pregnancy and infant outcomes following laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy. (cdc.gov)
  • Dr. Oduyebo is also a subject matter expert, and provides clinical consultation to healthcare providers and state, tribal, local and territorial health departments through the CDC Zika Pregnancy Hotline. (cdc.gov)
  • reducing teenage pregnancy rates, which is considered a public health issue. (bvsalud.org)
  • Result suggest that a practical approach to reduce teenage pregnancy rate in Africa is to implement strategies and policies aimed at improving female literacy rate, Health care expenditure and the GDP per capita of a country. (bvsalud.org)
  • This is majorly attributed to the numerous health consequences such as pregnancy related illness, high infant mortality rate, low birth weight babies, maternal mortality and exposure to sexually transmitted diseases 3 . (bvsalud.org)
  • The World Health Statistics review 10 indicates that the average teenage pregnancy rate across Africa is about 118 per 1000 females and this figure is very high when compared to the rate in other continents. (bvsalud.org)
  • The Synopsis 15 reported that poor access to sexual health services and urbanisation were also determinants of teenage pregnancy amongst developing countries. (bvsalud.org)
  • The offers of services concerning pregnancy are decisive for the future of child and mother. (who.int)
  • Vote on an amendment, S.AMDT.3330, to H.R.3043 (HHS Appropriations Bill): To prohibit the provision of funds to grantees who perform abortions, with exceptions for maternal health. (ontheissues.org)
  • The health-specific strategies which were brought forward in the Yemeni discussions on population, health and development, range from a narrow focus on facility-based maternal health services to broader concepts of reproductive health services. (yementimes.com)
  • The National Population Strategy endorsed in 1991 aimed both at reducing maternal mortality and morbidity and at lowering fertility rates and therefore focused on the provision of maternal health services and in particular on family planning services. (yementimes.com)
  • Progress against Millennium Development Goals 4 (Reduce child mortality) and 5 (Improve maternal health), for example, has been on track. (who.int)
  • These include family planning, which addresses the goals of reducing child mortality, improving maternal health and promoting women's empowerment and gender equality. (who.int)
  • And, it will harm access to health care for every woman employed by a company who decides to limit their coverage. (acponline.org)
  • ACP will continue to advocate on behalf of all of our patients in the interest of ensuring their access to necessary health care services. (acponline.org)
  • Raising awareness among mothers about the importance of antenatal care and assisting mothers who are financially disadvantaged or do not have access to health facilities will aid in providing better family planning services. (frontiersin.org)
  • Restrict a woman's religious liberty by imposing restrictions or limitations that make access to reproductive services more difficult or impossible to secure. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • They have everything to do with how many people are trying to access the system and how many doctors can service them. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • And recent changes to TRICARE policies help make sure you'll have easy, convenient, and timely access to contraceptive services. (health.mil)
  • Women's access to care is shaped by a wide range of factors, including federal and state health care policies. (kff.org)
  • The findings presented in this report examine women's coverage, access, and affordability of care, their connections to the health care delivery system and use of preventive care, use of reproductive health services, and responsibilities caring for family health needs. (kff.org)
  • The VFW has urged Congress and VA to ensure homeless veterans have access to childcare when receiving health care and job training services. (vfw.org)
  • Asserting that the Trump-era regulations "have undermined the public health of the population the program is meant to serve," the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services intends to restore Title X back to its pre-Trump regulatory framework , with "several modifications needed to strengthen the program and ensure access to equitable, affordable, client-centered, quality family planning services for all clients, especially for low-income clients. (guttmacher.org)
  • The centre is fully accessible by wheelchair, we have access to Translating and Interpreting Services, and many of our resources are available in languages other than English. (headspace.org.au)
  • I'm in the Global Scholars program at Byram Hills High School and am currently participating in the Changemaker Project to raise money for access to preventative women's health. (gofundme.com)
  • Among its many harms, the public charge rule would also threaten immigrants' overall health and sexual and reproductive health by effectively denying them access to health insurance through Medicaid. (yubanet.com)
  • Medicaid is the central U.S. program for ensuring that people with low incomes have coverage and access to reproductive health services . (yubanet.com)
  • If the judge rules in favor of the plaintiffs, access to free birth control, cancer screenings, vaccines, PrEP (HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis), counseling for alcohol misuse, diet counseling for people at higher risk of chronic disease, and many more preventive services would be in jeopardy, according to the nation's leading doctors' groups, which have sounded the alarm . (wfdd.org)
  • The lawsuit could cause millions of Americans, probably more than 150 million, to lose guaranteed access to preventive services," Dr. Jack Resneck , president of the American Medical Association, told NPR. (wfdd.org)
  • Last month, when the Court narrowly struck down a Louisiana law that would have limited access to abortion services, pro-choice advocates celebrated, but this new ruling is a blow to reproductive rights and health. (populationinstitute.org)
  • It's a devastating setback for reproductive rights that a boss's moral opinions can dictate an employee's ability to access fundamental health care services. (populationinstitute.org)
  • Could corporate bosses deny employees access to hormone therapy, STI and HIV screenings and treatment, or vaccines, simply by saying they think the services are immoral? (populationinstitute.org)
  • 25 Given this context, questions remain about how to best promote access and equity while streamlining health care delivery for populations 26 with unacceptable, ongoing disparities in health outcomes. (ahrq.gov)
  • As part of CCHI's vision - that all Coloradans can access affordable, high-quality and equitable health care - we stay alert to what is happening in the State Legislature that can affect women's access to care. (cohealthinitiative.org)
  • CCHI did not take an official position, however this definition of personhood has the potential to criminalize reproductive health treatments and therefore reduce Colorado women's access to care, or limit the treatments that medical providers are allowed to perform. (cohealthinitiative.org)
  • Restrictions on the movement of people and goods remain a major obstacle to socioeconomic development and health-care provision and, in particular, are affecting access to specialized care. (who.int)
  • It will support the strengthening of health systems, including Human Resources for Health (HRH), hospital management and reforms, improving access to essential medicines and health technology, and support establishing quality assurance and improvement mechanisms including drug & food regulation. (who.int)
  • The prevention and control of diseases, access to quality drugs, including contraceptives and HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, care and rehabilitation services, will be other areas of support. (who.int)
  • Evidence on access, health equity , or harms was lacking. (bvsalud.org)
  • For those who stop driving, access to alternative modes of transportation is important for health, wellbeing, mobility, and independence. (cdc.gov)
  • 2. Women's biological vulnerability, low social status, limited access to health services, low level of literacy and lack of decision-making powers are major determinants of ill-health. (who.int)
  • Difficult geographical and financial access, poor quality of care, attitude of health care workers and long waiting hours in health facilities have limited women's utilization of services. (who.int)
  • Denying access to PrEP threatens the health of more than 1.2 million Americans who could benefit from this potentially life saving intervention," stated Marwan Haddad, MD, MPH, chair of the HIV Medicine Association, in a press release issued by the organization. (medscape.com)
  • The federal mandate applied to all new health insurance plans in all states from 1 August 2012. (wikipedia.org)
  • WASHINGTON (JTA) - Jewish groups on both sides of a contraceptives controversy praised President Obama's compromise allowing religious institutions to direct staff to alternative health care plans funding such services. (jta.org)
  • Within the decade after that, an additional 30 million people are expected to acquire health plans-and if the economic studies are correct, they will try to double their use of the health-care system. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • For years, insurers had omitted contraceptives from prescription drug plans-the only entire class of drugs routinely and explicitly excluded-which made women's out-of-pocket medical expenses some 70 percent higher than men's. (salon.com)
  • Even this scaled-down measure would set an important precedent because the federal benefits package is often used as a model for private sector health plans. (salon.com)
  • This is counter to industry standards for private health insurance plans, which do not require out-of-pocket costs for preventative care prescriptions. (vfw.org)
  • While the regulation that makes this coverage available without co-pays went into effect on August 1, it does not apply to existing health insurance plans until they renew. (americanprogress.org)
  • Student health plans tend to renew on August 1 of each year, but most other plans, including employer-sponsored plans, tend to renew on January 1 of each year. (americanprogress.org)
  • Senate Bill 3 is a proposal that will clearly prohibit abortion coverage in the taxpayer supported insurance plans that will be created in Pennsylvania's health insurance exchange as we implement the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). (pacatholic.org)
  • Some plans may decide to limit or deny coverage for certain services. (wfdd.org)
  • A small percentage of American workers are covered by grandfathered insurance plans that are not required to follow the ACA's preventive care coverage rules. (wfdd.org)
  • The mandate, as a provision of ObamaCare, requires "preventive health services" to be covered by all health insurance issuers and all group health plans. (catholicphilly.com)
  • Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ("HHS") issued new proposed regulations on the provision of contraceptives by group health plans sponsored by certain faith-based organizations. (sgrlaw.com)
  • Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito stated that Hobby Lobby would have faced fines of $475 million per year and Conestoga $33 million for excluding some forms of birth control from their health plans. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • The Department of Labor (DOL) has updated its self-compliance tool for group health plans with pertinent provisions of PPACA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), the Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA) and Mental Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) to assist plan sponsors with the task of bringing their plans up-to-date. (reinhartlaw.com)
  • At the policy and institutional level the UNCT will assist the development and implementation of health, nutrition, education drugs, child protection and WASH policies, strategies, and sectoral plans. (who.int)
  • These rights must be provided by insurance plans in the Health Insurance Marketplace as well as most other types of health insurance. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Certain rights may not be provided by some health plans, such as grandfathered health plans. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Which types of contraceptive services no longer require cost-shares or copayments? (health.mil)
  • The U.S. Supreme Court hears arguments Tuesday in the latest challenge to the Obama health care overhaul. (kcur.org)
  • The fight over conscience protections in health care took another turn in 2012, when the Obama administration announced its rules regarding insurance coverage of contraceptives. (politifact.com)
  • Most provisions of the Obama health law kick in on Jan. 1, 2014. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • But nobody in the Obama administration needs to apologize to anyone for proposing-via its Catholic Secretary of Health and Human Services, and making a formal exception explicitly designed for Catholics-a simple, logical policy making it clear contraceptives were to be covered as a medically recognized preventive health care service. (washingtonmonthly.com)
  • On June 30, 2014, the United States Supreme Court issued a decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (" Hobby Lobby "), striking down a minor, but highly publicized and politically charged, agency regulation under the preventive services provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the "ACA") commonly known as the "contraceptive mandate. (quarles.com)
  • The U.S. Supreme Court just upheld two Trump administration rules that allow any "non-governmental employer"- even publicly traded for-profit companies - to deny their employees the contraceptive coverage provided by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) based on "moral" or "religious" objections. (populationinstitute.org)
  • Now that the Supreme Court has upheld the Trump administration's rules, schools, hospitals, non-profits, and publicly-traded companies - not just churches and other religiously-affiliated institutions - can deny contraceptive coverage by citing moral or religious objections, without any mechanism for providing that coverage another way. (populationinstitute.org)
  • The Supreme Court decision effectively gutting ACA contraceptive coverage may play well with Trump's political base, but not with most Americans. (populationinstitute.org)
  • Here is the problem: The health-care system can't possibly deliver on the huge increase in demand for primary-care services. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Nor is it clear, based on this decision, what other health care services may be denied one day because an employer objects to them morally. (populationinstitute.org)
  • HB16-1203 imposes costly burdens on clinics and pushes health care services out of reach for many low-income and vulnerable Coloradans. (cohealthinitiative.org)
  • Citation: Tahir MN, Ch NA, Farooq MW, Mubin G, Kataria JR. Situation analysis of the quality of primary health care services in Pakistan. (who.int)
  • In the Region, 79% of the facilities offered family planning services while 82% can offer antenatal care services. (who.int)
  • In the Region, 68% of health facilities in countries with available data have comprehensive emergency obstetric and neonatal care services. (who.int)
  • Once ObamaCare fully takes effect, all of us will be entitled to a long list of preventive services-with no deductible or copayment. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Prior to the announcement, Obamacare required birth control to be covered with no co-pay as a preventative measure. (abcactionnews.com)
  • O'Connor still has to decide on challenges to contraceptives and HPV mandates. (medscape.com)
  • First, the religious exemption, contained in previous regulations, was simplified for purposes of the contraceptive coverage mandate. (sgrlaw.com)
  • Not-for-profit organizations that do not meet this standard are provided with another approach for handling the contraceptive coverage mandate. (sgrlaw.com)
  • An accommodation will be made for faith-based, not-for-profit organizations that do not meet the Code definition of religious organization if they self-certify that they oppose coverage for some or all of the contraceptive coverage mandate due to religious objections, hold themselves out as religious organizations, and specify the contraceptive coverage that they object to covering. (sgrlaw.com)
  • The proposed regulations do not offer any relief to for-profit organizations that object to the contraceptive coverage mandate on religious grounds. (sgrlaw.com)
  • Lt. Col. Paula Neemann, 15th Healthcare Operations Squadron clinical medicine flight commander, demonstrates several birth options, such as an intrauterine device, at the 15th MDG's contraceptive clinic at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, May 6, 2021. (health.mil)
  • The overall utilization of contraceptives was discovered at 41.25% (39.98, 42.53). (frontiersin.org)
  • The spatial analysis of contraceptive usage discovered that the northern, central and southern parts of the country had higher utilization of contraceptives than the eastern and northeastern of the country. (frontiersin.org)
  • Coverage of interventions analyses the levels of utilization achieved for 'traditional' health services. (who.int)
  • Secular business entities are artificial legal bodies and do not possess religious exercise rights that entitle them to deny their employees legally mandated insurance coverage for some or all contraceptive services. (jewishpublicaffairs.org)
  • The administration's accommodation is a tacit effort to adapt to the insurance coverage context a central element of ethical principles long endorsed by a broad range of professional medical associations, which require a balance between health care providers' religious or moral objections to providing certain medical services and patients' rights to be informed about and receive those services. (guttmacher.org)
  • According to the World Health Organization, there are 40-50 million abortions per year and approximately 125,000 abortions per day. (archny.org)
  • Virtual health technologies, also considered telehealth services, may include mobile health applications (apps) or devices that collect patient-generated health data and interventions provided over the internet, such as screening questionnaires and education. (ahrq.gov)
  • Outcomes were also similar between telehealth interventions to replace or supplement IPV services and comparators for repeat IPV, depression , posttraumatic stress disorder , fear of partner, coercive control, self - efficacy , and safety behaviors (low SOE). (bvsalud.org)
  • Telehealth interventions for contraceptive care and IPV services demonstrate equivalent clinical and patient-reported outcomes versus in- person care, although few studies are available. (bvsalud.org)
  • More details regarding health promotion interventions at these specific developmental stages can be found in the Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents, 4th Edition (2017). (msdmanuals.com)
  • Alternatively, the government could extend the nonprofit religious employer accommodation to for-profit corporations with religious objections, in which case insurers or TPAs would be required to arrange and pay for the contraceptive services. (quarles.com)
  • The text of the executive order itself directs the secretary of Health and Human Services to 'considering issuing amended regulations, consistent with applicable law, to address conscience-based objections to the preventive-care mandate. (catholiccourier.com)
  • General reference Well-child visits aim to do the following: Promote health Prevent disease through routine vaccinations and education Detect and treat disease early Guide parents and caregivers to optimize the. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The authors, allegedly medical practitioners and religious scholars, argued that the heavy social problems Yemenis encountered were also resulting from the use of hormonal and mechanical contraceptives and encouraged early marriage in order to preserve the integrity (hasana) of the individual and the society (Shari'a Guidelines 1996: 2). (yementimes.com)
  • Kaplan-Meier, s'élevait à 92 % pour la pilule contraceptive orale combinée à faible dosage hormonal, à 86 % pour les implants libérant du lévonorgestrel, à 82 % pour les dispositifs intra-utérins (DIU) et à 53 % pour l'acétate de médroxyprogestérone durant la première année. (who.int)
  • However, Respondent A's plan excludes coverage for prescription contraceptive drugs and devices, whether they are used for birth control or for other medical purposes.Charging Party A wishes to use oral contraceptives for birth control purposes. (reproductiverights.org)
  • Based on her medical history, Charging Party A also wishes to use oral contraceptives to alleviate the symptoms of dysmenorrhea and pre-menstrual syndrome and to prevent the development of ovarian cancer.Charging Party B, a registered nurse, began her employment with Respondent B on May 1, 1999. (reproductiverights.org)
  • American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists' Committee on Gynecologic Practice Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptive Expert Work Group. (cdc.gov)
  • Recent research has found that telehealth may improve some obstetric and gynecologic outcomes 8 and may be effective for contraceptive care. (ahrq.gov)
  • Although there were more than 458,000 reported traumatic brain injuries in the DOD between 2000-2022, "most TBIs occur in noncombat settings," according to the Defense Health Agency's Traumatic Brain Injury Center of Excellence . (health.mil)
  • The Bright Futures/AAP recommendations for preventive pediatric health care (2022), also called the periodicity schedule, are a schedule of screenings and assessments recommended at each well-child visit for newborns through adolescents 21 years of age. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Lyons, Edward C., Causation and Complicity: The HHS Contraceptive Mandate and Asymmetrical Burdens on Free Exercise (September 30, 2013). (ssrn.com)
  • This suit challenges new rules issued by the Trump administration that illegally jeopardize women's health and economic success in order to promote certain religious and moral views," the Washington state suit reads. (abcactionnews.com)
  • But if a woman's employer is a charity or a hospital that has a religious objection to providing contraceptive services as part of their health plan, the insurance company - not the hospital, not the charity - will be required to reach out and offer the woman contraceptive care free of charge, without co-pays and without hassles. (jta.org)
  • In essence, professional medical standards typically endorse a provider's right to step away, or "withdraw" from providing a health care service that violates his or her moral or religious beliefs, but not in a way that blocks or denies patients' own right to care. (guttmacher.org)
  • Catholic health care has been part of the Pennsylvania landscape since the first religious sisters bravely traveled to the New World to aid sick and vulnerable colonists in Philadelphia. (pacatholic.org)
  • WASHINGTON (CNS) - The president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has called on President Donald Trump to ease the "onerous" contraceptive mandate of the Department of Health and Human Services under the Affordable Care Act because it violates religious freedom. (catholiccourier.com)
  • It also comes two months after the May 31 leak of a draft rule from HHS exempting religious groups from the contraceptive mandate. (catholiccourier.com)
  • On Jan 20, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a mandate placing first amendment rights and religious freedom in the crosshairs. (catholicphilly.com)
  • The companies argued that they should be exempted from the contraceptive requirement because the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) says that the government may not pose a "substantial burden" on the free exercise of religion unless that burden is the narrowest possible way to further a compelling government interest. (spacecoastdaily.com)
  • To single out PrEP, which are FDA approved drugs that effectively prevent HIV, and conclude that its coverage violates the religious freedom of certain individuals, is plain wrong, highly discriminatory, and impedes the public health of our nation," he said. (medscape.com)
  • and social determinants of health including transportation barriers, food insecurity, and trauma. (ahrq.gov)
  • Furthermore, the government argues that Hobby Lobby, in claiming it is exempt from some requirements of the health care law, is shifting the burden to its employees. (kcur.org)
  • Respondent B is commonly owned with Respondent A, and offers to its employees the same health insurance policy that Respondent A offers to its employees. (reproductiverights.org)