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Federal Mandate for Insurance Coverage of Contraception. Trever Pearson and Holly Szafarek PA 770 April 13, 2012. Problem Identification. Benefits of Contraception Pregnancy Prevention Women in the Workplace Medical Benefits Prohibitive Cost Deficit Reduction Act (DRA)
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Federal Mandate forInsurance Coverage of Contraception Trever Pearson and Holly Szafarek PA 770 April 13, 2012
Problem Identification • Benefits of Contraception • Pregnancy Prevention • Women in the Workplace • Medical Benefits • Prohibitive Cost • Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) • Half of all pregnancies unintended • $12 Billion/yr • Equal Protection • Burden felt mostly by women
Criteria of Evaluation Economic Efficiency Distributional Equity Cultural/Political Acceptability
Alternative 1 - Status Quo • No Federal Intervention • State Regulation • Contraceptive Equity Laws • 26 states have such laws http://knowledgecenter.csg.org/drupal/content/states-forefront-contraception-mandates
Alternative 2 - Federal Mandate • Requires insurance coverage of preventive health services for women. • Includes: • Contraceptives • Emergency contractive drugs Plan B and Ella • Sterilization • Excludes: • Abortion pill RU-486 • Exemption: • Religious organizations such as churches
Alternative 3 - Federal Mandate w/ Broadened Exemptions • Same insurance requirement for contraceptives • Broadened exemptions to include religiously-affiliated institutions that object to coverage • Hospitals • Universities • Social Service Agencies
Evaluations of AlternativesCriteria 1 – Economic Efficiency • $1 of coverage saves $4.02 in Medicaid birth costs (Rose, 2009, p. 25) • Contraception Services Saves $4.3 billion in Medicaid pregnancy costs • Not including the costs of treatment for diseases prevented by birth control (p. 24) • Unintended pregnancy costs nearly $10,000 each, a total of $12.1 billion in Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Programs and $103 million in abortion costs (Thomas & Monea, 2011, p. 3).
Evaluations of AlternativesCriteria 1 – Economic Efficiency (cont) • Status Quo • Inefficient and does nothing to reduce costs • Mandate without Exemption • Employer premium increase: 0.6% • Failure to provide coverage for contraception could cost employer approx. 15-17% more (Chettiar, 2002, p. 1878) • Mandate with Exemption • Similar to without albeit a shift in cost from employer to insurance provider
Evaluations of AlternativesCriteria 2 – Distributional Equity • Equal Protection Rights • Status quo creates a burden felt by women • Federal mandate is intended to “eliminate discriminatory insurance practices that undermine the health and economic well-being of women” (Chettiar, 2002, p. 1877). • Broadened religious exemptions may created a different equity issue • First Amendment’s Establishment Clause
Evaluations of AlternativesCriteria 3 – Cultural/Political Acceptability • Highly divisive issue • First Amendment Free Exercise Rights v. Equal Protection Rights • Government responsibility to uphold equal protection rights • Religious groups don’t want to pay for the health decisions of the immoral • Economic Conservatives see mandate as an intrusion into private sector • Status Quo – “War on Women”, Religious takeover of Government • Mandate with no Exemption – “Attack on Religion”, Government takeover of Private Sector • Mandate with Exemption – Government takeover of Private Sector
Comparison of results *Bad = 1, Not as Bad = 2, Moderate = 3, Good = 4
Recommendation • Federal mandate with broadened exemption