HHS Call 8/1: IOM Recs OK But Religious Exception

The new HHS rules accept IOM recommendations to cover contraception. screenings for domestic violence and 6 other services as preventive services for women (without additional co-pays) BUT allow religious institutions to determine coverage for contraception for employees.  The call announced below for Aug. 1 at 4:30 pm EDT/1:30 PDT is still on. – Ellen Shaffer

 Call to Discuss Important Affordable Care Act Announcement
Please join HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Tina Tchen, Executive Director of the White House Council on Women and Girls and Mayra Alvarez, Director of Public Health Policy in the Office of Health Reform at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on a conference call to discuss an important Affordable Care Act announcement.
 
WHO:                   Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Tina Tchen, White House
Mayra Alvarez, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
 
WHEN:                 Monday, August 1, 2011 at 4:30p.m. ET / 1:30pm. PT
 
DIAL IN:                888-968-3518
 
PASSCODE:         HHS
News Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 1, 2011 Contact: HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343

Affordable Care Act Ensures Women Receive Preventive Services at No Additional Cost
Historic new guidelines that will ensure women receive preventive health services at no additional cost were announced today by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Developed by the independent Institute of Medicine, the new guidelines require new health insurance plans to cover women’s preventive services such as well-woman visits, breastfeeding support, domestic violence screening, and contraception without charging a co-payment, co-insurance or a deductible.
“The Affordable Care Act helps stop health problems before they start,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.  “These historic guidelines are based on science and existing literature and will help ensure women get the preventive health benefits they need.”
Before health reform, too many Americans didn’t get the preventive health care they need to stay healthy, avoid or delay the onset of disease, lead productive lives, and reduce health care costs.  Often because of cost, Americans used preventive services at about half the recommended rate.
Last summer, HHS released new insurance market rules under the Affordable Care Act requiring all new private health plans to cover several evidence-based preventive services like mammograms, colonoscopies, blood pressure checks, and childhood immunizations without charging a copayment, deductible or coinsurance. The Affordable Care Act also made recommended preventive services free for people on Medicare.
Today’s announcement builds on that progress by making sure women have access to a full range of recommended preventive services without cost sharing, including:
well-woman visits;
screening for gestational diabetes;
human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA testing for women 30 years and older;
sexually-transmitted infection counseling;
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) screening and counseling;
FDA-approved contraception methods and contraceptive counseling;
breastfeeding support, supplies, and counseling; and
domestic violence screening and counseling.
New health plans will need to include these services without cost sharing for insurance policies with plan years beginning on or after August 1, 2012.  The rules governing coverage of preventive services which allow plans to use reasonable medical management to help define the nature of the covered service apply to women’s preventive services.  Plans will retain the flexibility to control costs and promote efficient delivery of care by, for example, continuing to charge cost-sharing for branded drugs if a generic version is available and is just as effective and safe for the patient to use.
The administration also released an amendment to the prevention regulation that allows religious institutions that offer insurance to their employees the choice of whether or not to cover contraception services. This regulation is modeled on the most common accommodation for churches available in the majority of the 28 states that already require insurance companies to cover contraception.  HHS welcomes comment on this policy.
Previously, preventive services for women had been recommended one-by-one or as part of guidelines targeted at men as well.  As such, the HHS directed the independent Institute of Medicine to, for the first time ever, conduct a scientific review and provide recommendations on specific preventive measures that meet women’s unique health needs and help keep women healthy.  HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) used the IOM report issued July 19, when developing the guidelines that are being issued today. The IOM’s report relied on independent physicians, nurses, scientists, and other experts to make these determinations based on scientific evidence.
Today’s announcement is another part of the Obama Administration’s broader effort to address the health and well-being of our communities through initiatives such as the President’s Childhood Obesity Task Force, the First Lady’s Let’s Move! campaign, the National Quality Strategy, and the National Prevention Strategy.
For more information on the HHS guidelines for expanding women’s preventive services, please visit: http://www.healthcare.gov/news/factsheets/womensprevention08012011a.html. The guidelines can be found at: www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines/.
To learn more about the Affordable Care Act, please visit www.healthcare.gov.

Catholics for Choice, CA OWH, Speak on IOM Report on KPFA

Catholics for Choice, CA OWH, Speak on IOM Report

Link to KPFA Radio Show

Listen to Jon O’ Brien, President of Catholics for Choice; and Terri Thorfinnson, JD, Chief, Office of Women’s Health, Department of Health Care Services and California Department of Public Health, discuss the IOM Report: Clinical Preventive Services for Women: Closing the Gap, with KPFA radio “Livingroom” Co-Hosts Kris Welch and Ellen Shaffer, on Friday, July 22.

The show airs from 12 Noon to 1 p.m.  The women’s health segment begins about halfway through, at 12:30.  Click on the link below to listen -advance to 30 mins. using your media player :

http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/71761

South Coast Today: Good news for women’s health and pocketbooks

South Coast Today    National View: Good news for women’s health and pocketbooks   By Cindy Pearson and Lois Uttley
July 22, 2011 12:00 AM

The Institute of Medicine, an independent panel of doctors and health experts, has just recommended that insurance companies be told to stop charging co-pays for contraception and several other types of women’s preventive health care in any new health plans. Ending those extra out-of-pocket insurance charges will be good for women’s health and good for women’s pocketbooks.Medical experts also are urging that insurance companies end co-pays for breastfeeding supports, including rental of breast pumps and for annual well-woman exams, HIV infection screening and counseling for women experiencing domestic violence. Most of the public attention so far, though, has focused on the experts’ recommendations about contraception. No wonder, because the vast majority of women in our country have used birth control at some time in their lives.For young women and their families who are struggling in these tough economic times, a $20 or $30 co-pay can make it difficult to afford to fill a birth control prescription each month. Some contraceptive methods like IUDs, which work better for certain women, require co-pays or deductibles that can run into hundreds of dollars. It’s understandable that women facing financial stress report they use contraception inconsistently and put off family planning office visits to save money.Without affordable and reliable contraception, however, women face the risk of unintended pregnancy. In fact, half of all pregnancies in this country are now unintended. Medical experts point out that there can be serious health consequences for both women and babies from these “surprise” pregnancies. When a woman isn’t able to space pregnancies, allowing enough time between them, her risk of experiencing maternal health problems increases. This is especially true for women who have health conditions like high blood pressure or heart disease that may be exacerbated by pregnancy, problems that disproportionately affect women of color.Women whose pregnancies are not planned are less likely to receive timely prenatal care, quit smoking and begin taking adequate folic acid to promote a healthy pregnancy.When there is an interval of less than a year between births — which can happen when a woman has no family planning — the chances increase for a pre-term birth and a low birth-weight baby who will be at risk of serious complications and even death in the first year of life.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has cited family planning as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century precisely because it improved the health of women and their babies.But affordable contraception does more than protect women’s health. It also protects a family’s economic security by enabling women to have children when they are able to support them. That’s why the American public strongly supports family planning services — with 84 percent of those polled in June by Lake Research Associates citing contraception as an important preventive health service.We urge the Department of Health and Human Services to adopt the recommendations of the Institute of Medicine in full and require that new insurance plans remove co-pays and extra charges for family planning and contraceptives. It will be a historic step for women’s health and the economic well-being of families across America.

National View: Good news for women’s health and pocketbooks  SouthCoastToday.com

Cindy Pearson is executive director of the National Women’s Health Network. Lois Uttley is president-elect of the Public Health Association of NYC. They are co-founders of Raising Women’s Voices for the Health Care We Need

RCRC: A Tremendous Stride Forward in Women’s Reproductive Health

 Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, Reverend Dr. Carlton W,. Veazey, President and CEO 

We are on the verge of a tremendous stride forward in women’s reproductive health.
 
Today, a panel of health experts recommended that women be able to get their birth control prescriptions filled without a co-pay or deductible. You and I have advocated prayerfully and constantly for improved access to contraception for the millions of women, especially young women and lower-income women, who struggle every day to afford prescription birth control. Now, after a year of research and debate, the Institute of Medicine’s independent experts have agreed with us that birth control is a cornerstone of preventive health care for women and must be fully covered by health insurance under the health care reform law.
 
The ability to plan pregnancies is so important that RCRC considers it a moral value and a matter of social justice. Research and our own family experiences confirm that family planning helps to build strong families, protect the health of women and children, reduce child and spousal abuse, and prevent unwanted pregnancies and reduce the need for abortion.
 
But opponents of comprehensive reproductive health care – including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Family Research Council – are fighting this breakthrough. They ignore medicine and science and equate birth control with abortion. Our work now will focus on urging the Obama Administration’s Department of Health and Human Services to include contraceptive coverage in preventive health care and to eliminate the cost barriers that keep many American women from using birth control consistently.
 
In the weeks to come, we will be updating you on our progress and asking for your help. Please watch for our email messages and visit us on facebook. A decision by HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on this and other Institute of Medicine recommendations released today is expected in August. Your voice will be critical to building support.
 
Peace and Blessings, 
Reverend Dr. Carlton W. Veazey, President and CEO

Birth Control? Really? (Yes, Really!)

Birth Control?  Really?
Yes, Really!
Ellen R. Shaffer
Co-Director, Center for Policy Analysis  Posted: 7/20/11 06:22 PM ET

On Tuesday, the Institute of Medicine reported what most breathing humans know more or less reflexively: That contraception is a preventive health care service. Why is this even a question?  And why must we answer it now?

Birth control is a safe and legal service that is both cost effective and particularly beneficial to women’s health. It not only protects us from the social and economic burdens of unintended pregnancies, which are relatively high in the United States. It empowers us to imagine and pursue autonomous and fulfilling lives that include the joys of healthy parenthood if and when we’re ready for it.

 Most Americans believe that contraception should be affordable and accessible, whether or not they personally use it, including most Catholics, according to numerous studies reported this year by Catholics for Choice .  Nearly 100 percent of heterosexually active women have used a birth control method currently banned by the Vatican, and most continue to. Ready access should be a matter decided by women and their clinicians, certainly not by politicians.  

The IOM report on gaps in coverage under health reform recommends that contraception be readily available at no cost, as should screenings for cancer, HIV, diabetes, and domestic violence. The next step is asking HHS to adopt these life-saving recommendations. This should be a slam-dunk.  But it may not be. The remaining gaps are not in our science but in our advocacy. 

Opposition arguments to these recommendations are so flimsy that they are rarely reported in the mainstream media. They are promulgated largely by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, an organization that does not represent the practices or beliefs of their own congregations, or most people of other faiths, and whose lapses in sexual ethics are threatening the vitality of the Church.

So, why is the issue of contraception still a question, and why must we answer it now? The fact is that years of bullying have escalated into a war on women. Despite our most careful and strategic parrying, the words “women” and “women’s health” have become stigmatized in the fickle world of mainstream politics.

It’s time to trust ourselves with decisions about our destiny. It’s time for people of conscience to raise our voices and visibility on fundamental matters of choice. This petition to HHS is a perfect place to start.

See also: http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6309/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5434

View on HuffPo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ellen-r-shaffer/birth-control-america_b_905061.html


IOM: No-Cost Prevention To Include Contraception, Violence Counselling

Sign the petition asking Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to accept these medically-based recommendations and to support no-cost contraception.

And this excellent petition: http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6309/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5434

IOM Report: Clinical Preventive Services for Women: Closing the Gaps

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) addresses preventive services for both men and women of all ages, and women in particular stand to benefit from additional preventive health services. The Department of Health and Human Services charged the IOM with reviewing what preventive services are important to women’s health and well-being and then recommending which of these should be considered in the development of comprehensive guidelines. The IOM recommends that women’s preventive services include, among other services, improved screening for cervical cancer, sexually transmitted infections, and HIV; a fuller range of contraceptive education, counseling, methods, and services; services for pregnant women; at least one well-woman preventive care visit annually; and screening and counseling for interpersonal and domestic violence.

From Trust Women/SilverRibbon:

An expert Institute of Medicine panel commissioned by the Department of Health and Human Services has recommended 8 preventive health services that should be provided without copayments or deductibles, under the terms of the Affordable Care Act.
 
The IOM panel report embraces a number of public health priorities identified in testimony to the panel by the EQUAL Health Network .

“Women’s health will benefit substantially from better access to these key services once they are cost-free: contraception, breastfeeding and support services, screening and counseling for domestic violence, and an annual well-woman visit, ” said Ellen R. Shaffer, PhD, Co-Director of the Trust Women/Silver Ribbon Campaign and the EQUAL Health Network.  “This constellation of services offers women and their families enormous opportunities to better control and to improve their life circumstances.”
 
“The IOM’s nonpartisan evidence-based decision to cover contraception without charge is long overdue,” according to Dr. Sophia Yen, MD, an adolescent medicine physician practicing at Packard Children’s Hospital.  “This will be a huge stride in preventing unintended pregnancies and thus unnecessary abortions.  I’ve seen too many women change to less effective methods of birth control because of costs in these dire financial times.  Cost-free coverage for birth control is a critical life-line to millions of women and their families.”

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, New York Times: “We are one step closer to saying goodbye to an era when simply being a woman is treated as a pre-existing condition,” Ms. Mikulski said. “We are saying hello to an era where decisions about preventive care and screenings are made by a woman and her doctor, not by an insurance company.”

Planned Parenthood Shasta Pacific:

As part of the Affordable Care Act (aka Health Care Reform), an independent panel (the IOM) was charged with recommending which women’s health services were to be considered preventive care – thus free or at low cost. The final decision now lies with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services which is expected in August of this year.

The new health care reform law represents the single biggest opportunity to advance women’s health in 45 years, and this recommendation could have one of the most far-reaching impacts we have seen in generations.  Medical data, public opinion, now the IOM are now all on the same page– for the first time in our national history, Birth Control without access-blocking cost barriers is within reach.

Sign the Birth Control Matters Petition now!

Heather Saunders Estes, President & CEO, Planned Parenthood Shasta Pacific

From RWV:

Want to know more about the recommendations?  Join Raising Women’s Voices coordinators and Susan Wood, Director of the Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health at the George Washington University School of Public Health, on Thursday, July 21 at noon EDT, to review the IOM report and discuss what it means for women.  Register here for the call and to get the call-in information.

Spread the word! Share the news about the IOM report with your network on Twitter.  Include #ThankYouIOM to show your support and encourage your followers to do the same.  Also check out RWV’s twitter profile for the #ThankYouIOM Twibbon. 

The National Women’s Law Center

We women already know it, but it’s nice to have a panel of experts confirm it: contraception is preventive health care!

But we’re not done yet – Obama Administration officials will decide soon whether to accept the expert recommendations released earlier today.

Sign our petition asking Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to accept these medically-based recommendations and to support no-cost contraception.

The Hill: Women’s health advocates praise IOM recommendations 

Statement from Dr. Susan Wood Regarding IOM Report that Recommends Eight Additional Women’s Health Preventative Services for Coverage

http://www.gwumc.edu/news/newsitems.cfm?neID=411

07-19-2011

Statement from Susan F. Wood, PhD
Associate Professor of Health Policy
Director, Jacob Institute of Women’s Health
The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services

Former Assistant Commissioner for Women’s Health, FDA

Women know that preventive services for women includes family planning.  Today the IOM confirmed that contraception is prevention and is part of the prevention package that should be covered by all health care plans.  By reducing co-pays and deductibles for women getting contraception, this will help women and couples plan their families, space their children, reduce unintended pregnancies, and promote better health for women and children.   Preventing unintended pregnancies is the best way to prevent abortion.

Women spend decades of their lives trying to prevent pregnancy, and only a few years actually trying to get pregnant and having children.  Making contraception affordable by eliminating co-pays and deductibles is common sense for millions of women and couples across the country – and a real benefit that women will see immediately in their pocketbooks.  This coverage of contraception will truly help “Close the Gaps” for women.

Contraception is not controversial – except sometimes for politicians.  But this should not be political; coverage of contraception should be based on the evidence as outlined by IOM, which shows that contraception for women is indeed safe and effective prevention. Along with well-woman visits and critical screening for gestational diabetes, STDs, domestic violence, and other important women’s health preventive services, the IOM report “Closing the Gaps” has helped ensure that women’s health counts when we talk about prevention. Women should not be blocked from these critical preventive services due to cost or political debate.

IOM Report July 20 – Wear Your Silver Ribbon!

Is contraception a preventive health care service? Wear your “Trust Women” Silver Ribbon pin on July 20-22 if you think so.  

An Institute on Medicine panel will  recommend their findings on July 20 to the federal Department of Health and Human Services whether contraception should be covered under the Affordab;e Care Act for free, without co-payments or deductibles, like all other preventive  services.

Join Ttust Women/Silver Ribbon Campaign partners at media events July 20-22. Wear your Silver Ribbon to show that you stand with the majority who trust women to make decisioms about our health.

From the IOM:

The report will be released at a one-hour public briefing starting at 10 a.m. EDT Wednesday, July 20, in the First Amendment Room of the National Press Club, 529 14th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Those who cannot attend may participate through a live audio webcast that will be posted on the IOM’s webpage (http://iom.edu/Activities/Women/PreventiveServicesWomen/2011-JUL-20.aspx) shortly before the event begins.

To register to attend the briefing in person, please use this link: http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/589440/Report-Release-Clinical-Preventive-Services-for-Women.

To register for the audiocast, please use our separate online form, which can be found here: http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/589502/Report-Release-AUDIOCAST-Clinical-Preventive-Services-for-Women.

Please direct all media/reporter calls about the report to: News Office – National Academies, (202)-334-2138<tel:%28202%29-334-2138> or onpi@nas.edu<mailto:onpi@nas.edu>.

See the IOM’s primary webpage, http://www.iom.edu/preventiveserviceswomen, which is a “one-stop shop” for the project. That webpage has links to past meetings, the upcoming public briefing, and will have future announcements and materials related to the project.

Recommendations for Preventive Services to Women and Girls

Recommendations to IOM on Prevention Services for Women CPHAN and EQUAL 

The California Public Health Association-North[1] and EQUAL Health Network[2], transmitted the following recommendations to the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on Preventive Services for Women for its consideration.  The recommendations strongly support preventive services that are necessary for women’s health and well-being and should be considered in the development of comprehensive guidelines for preventive services for women. These services address gaps that exist in recommended preventive services for USPSTF Grade A and B preventive services guidelines for women and in Bright Futures and USPSTF Grade A and B guidelines for adolescents. We highlight specific services and screenings that should supplement currently recommended preventive services for women. 

Recommendations for Preventive Services to Women and Girls

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendations fail to address any preventive reproductive health services for women, and critical gender‐specific preventive services that promote wellness, well‐being and healthy outcomes for women. We ask the Institute of Medicine Study Committee to include the following on its list of recommended preventive services for women:

1. Provide comprehensive family planning, preconception and interconception services.

a. The comprehensive range of family planning services (clinical assessment, education and counseling, method provision), prescriptions and devices are essential to health and reproductive health.

b. Preconception and interconception care are needed preventive services to ensure women are healthy when they become pregnant.

2. Provide comprehensive prenatal and post‐partum care to pregnant and parenting women.

a. Prenatal care services for all pregnant and postpartum women include case management, health education, nutrition and psychosocial risk assessments and referrals.

b. Integrate clinical activities from basic through subspecialty services as supported by The American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

3. Provide a comprehensive annual well‐woman visit.

a. A well‐woman visit provides preventive care and to manage gender‐based complex health needs. This would include sensitive and comprehensive preventive health counseling.

4. Routinely screen for intimate partner violence and conduct periodic assessments about violence.

a. Include an assessment of intimate partner violence (IPV), teen dating violence, reproductive coercion, IPV during pregnancy, sexual violence.

b. Screen for depression, substance abuse, and chronic illnesses.

5. Provide optimum nutrition screening and counseling along with support of physical activity.

a. Follow the Healthy People 2020: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives13 for healthy eating and physical activity for women and adolescents

6. Routinely screen and treat eating disorders.

a. Include both nutrition counseling and behavioral health treatment to address eating disorders.

7. Promote a comprehensive range of breastfeeding and support services

a. Provide breastfeeding promotion, education and counseling services to women, by qualified individuals based on the level of intervention required, including information about breastfeeding related durable medical equipment, supplies and banked human milk.

b. Follow The Healthy People 2020: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for increasing breastfeeding initiation, exclusivity and duration rates.

Adapted from: Written testimony submitted to the Institute of Medicine Study Committee on preventive services for women. Sacramento: The Office of Women’s Health, Department of Public Health and the Department of Health Care Services (2011).

The California Public Health Association-North (CPHA-N) represents the diverse public health work force, community needs, and interests in Northern and Central California, provides leadership in public health in California, and initiates and supports action to meet needs or remedy problems including education and legislation. It provides opportunities for persons actively engaged or interested in the broad field of public health to share knowledge and experiences in order to achieve the primary goal of protecting and promoting public, environmental and personal health.

** EQUAL Health Network brings together partners from public health, women’s health and the public to advocate for Equitable, Quality, Universal, Affordable – EQUAL – health care. EQUAL is a project of the Center for Policy Analysis, an independent 501c3 organization working for a healthier world.

From Crisis to Progress: This Week In Health Care Politics

So Republicans say they will not push Medicare repeal as a condition of raising the debt ceiling, which begins to expire on May 16 and still has life through August. Turns out even those deluded by Fox News aren’t buying that one just yet, even though the House voted for the Ryan budget bill for 2012 a few weeks ago that featured turning Medicare into a scantily-funded voucher program.

So what other egregious demands can we expect?

Well for one hint take a look at H.R. 3, and the Dems’ concession in the 2011 budget fight to sacrifice abortions for poor women in DC. H.R. 3 is the bill that would strip abortion coverage from private health insurance plans, on the grounds that employers that provide these plans receive a federal tax credit for doing so. Women who receive the small number of abortions still permitted because the pregnancies were caused by rape or incest could be required to document their trauma to insurance agents or regulators to get coverage. It passed the House on Wednesday by a vote of 251 to 175, with zero R’s voting No and 16 Democrats in support: Altmire, Boren, Costello, Critz, Cuellar, Donnelly (IN), Holden, Kaptur, Kildee, Lipinski, Matheson, McIntyre, Peterson, Rahall, Ross (AR), and Shuler.

Reproductive rights has lost majority support in the House and the Senate. The 40-plus dependable champions in the Senate can muster a filibuster, but that’s still short of the majority that would reflect pro-choice opinion in the country.

Of the 33 Senate seats up in 2012, 23 are Democrats (or Independents who vote with Ds) and 10 are Republicans

So:

Come to the May 13 conference From Crisis to Progress: Health Care Reform, Public Health, and Women’s Preventive Services

Friday, May 13, 2011 ~ 8:30am to 4:00pm

Elihu Harris State Office Building at 1515 Clay Street, Oakland CA

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER ONLINE

Meanwhile, in California, there is progress;

State Senator Mark Leno’s state single payer bill, SB 810, moved forward from the Senate health committee this week.

And CA Assembly member Mike Feuer’s AB 52 moved ahead. This bill would authorize the state Insurance Commissioner to limit excessive health insurance increases, a power now available for auto insurance but not for health care. AB 52 moved out of the Assembly Health Committee and on to the financing committee (Appropriations) . If successful in Approps, it should go to the Assembly for a vote in June. Think your health insurance costs to much? Call or write your state assembly member and senator and let them know – and send a copy to Mike.