November 16, 2010
Contraception is not authentic preventive health care because pregnancy
is not a disease
Birth control poses serious health
risks to women and
adolescents
Mandating coverage would pose unprecedented
threat to conscience rights
WASHINGTON (November 16, 2010) — Deirdre McQuade, spokesperson for the
Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, addressed the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on Preventive Services
for Women as they convened for the first time on November 16th. She urged them
not to recommend contraception or sterilization among mandated “preventive
services” to be announced next August by the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) as the Department implements the new health care act.
“As
you study the vital question of preventive services for women under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), I urge you to focus on services that
will offer authentic care and save lives,” she said.
Echoing the letter
sent by the Office of the General Counsel to HHS on September 17, McQuade said, “The Conference has a particular concern
that contraceptives and sterilization not be mandated as ‘preventive’ services.
To prevent pregnancy is not to prevent a disease—indeed, contraception and
sterilization pose their own unique and serious health
risks to women
and adolescents. In addition, contraceptives and sterilization are morally
problematic for many stakeholders, including religiously-affiliated health care
providers and insurers.”
According to McQuade, the preventive services
recommended under the Interim Final Rules share a basic medical profile. “They
pose little or no medical risk themselves, and they help prevent or ameliorate
identifiable conditions that would pose known risks to life and health in the
future,” McQuade said, but contraception “presents the opposite
profile.”
She continued, “Use of prescription contraception actually
increases a woman’s risk of developing some of the very conditions that
the ‘preventive services’ listed in the Interim Final Rules are designed to
prevent, such as stroke, heart attacks and blood clots (especially for
women who also smoke), so a policy mandating contraceptive services as
‘preventive services’ would be in contradiction with itself.”
McQuade added,
“At various times women may have serious personal reasons for wanting to avoid
or delay a pregnancy. However, these personal reasons do not transform a
temporary or permanent condition of infertility into a prerequisite for health,
or turn a healthy pregnancy into a disease condition.”
She also
highlighted the potential impact on conscience rights. “Currently, such
employers and insurance issuers [who object to contraception and sterilization]
are completely free under federal law to purchase and offer health coverage that
excludes these procedures. They would lose this freedom of conscience under a
mandate for all plans to offer contraception and sterilization coverage,”
McQuade said. “Thus the Administration’s promise that Americans who like their
current coverage will be able to keep it under health care reform would become a
hollow pledge.”
She concluded, “The Administration rightly does not
include contraceptives or sterilization as preventive services in its Interim
Final Rules, and future rulemaking or other guidance should also refrain from
doing so. We hope these considerations will be taken into account as the
Institute of Medicine prepares to make its recommendations on a final list of
required preventive services for women.”
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Keywords: Catholic bishops,
USCCB, pro-life, Institute of Medicine, IOM, HHS, preventive services, health
care, PPACA, women, adolescents, contraception, sterilization, birth control,
conscience rights