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Health care law gives women control over their care, offers free preventive services to 47 million women
http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2012pres/07/20120731a.html
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 31, 2012
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Contact: HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343
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Health care law gives women control over their care, offers free preventive services to 47 million women
Forty-seven million women are getting greater control over their
health care and access to eight new prevention-related health care
services without paying more out of their own pocket beginning Aug. 1,
2012, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
announced today.
Previously some insurance companies did not cover
these preventive services for women at all under their health plans,
while some women had to pay deductibles or copays for the care they
needed to stay healthy. The new rules in the health care law requiring
coverage of these services take effect at the next renewal date – on or
after Aug. 1, 2012—for most health insurance plans. For the first time
ever, women will have access to even more life-saving preventive care
free of charge.
According to a new HHS report also released today,
approximately 47 million women are in health plans that must cover
these new preventive services at no charge. Women, not insurance
companies, can now make health decisions that will keep them healthy,
catch potentially serious conditions at an earlier state, and protect
them and their families from crushing medical bills.
“President
Obama is moving our country forward by giving women control over their
health care,” Secretary Sebelius said. “This law puts women and their
doctors, not insurance companies or the government, in charge of health
care decisions.”
The eight new prevention-related services are:
- Well-woman visits.
- Gestational diabetes screening that helps protect pregnant women from one of the most serious pregnancy-related diseases.
- Domestic and interpersonal violence screening and counseling.
- FDA-approved contraceptive methods, and contraceptive education and counseling.
- Breastfeeding support, supplies, and counseling.
- HPV DNA testing, for women 30 or older.
- Sexually transmitted infections counseling for sexually-active women.
- HIV screening and counseling for sexually-active women.
The
health care law has already helped women in private plans and Medicare
for the first time gain access to potentially life-saving tests and
services, such as mammograms, cholesterol screenings, and flu shots
without coinsurance or deductibles. Today’s announcement builds on these
benefits, generally requiring insurance companies to offer, with no
copay, additional vital screenings and tests to help keep women healthy
throughout their lives.
These services are based on
recommendations from the Institute of Medicine, which relied on
independent physicians, nurses, scientists, and other experts as well as
evidence-based research to develop its recommendations. These
preventive services will be offered without cost sharing beginning today
in all new health plans.
Group health plans and issuers that have
maintained grandfathered status are not required to cover these
services. In addition, certain nonprofit religious organizations, such
as churches and schools, are not required to cover these services. The
Obama administration will continue to work with all employers to give
them the flexibility and resources they need to implement the health
care law in a way that protects women’s health while making common-sense
accommodations for values like religious liberty.
For women who
are pregnant or nursing, the new preventive services include gestational
diabetes screening as well as breast-feeding support, counseling and
supplies. Health services already provided under the health care law
include folic acid supplements for women who may become pregnant,
Hepatitis B screening for pregnant women, and anemia screening for
pregnant women.
Women Medicare beneficiaries may already receive
such preventive services as annual wellness visits, mammograms, and bone
mass measurement for those at risk of osteoporosis and diabetes
screening. Approximately 24.7 million women with Medicare used at least
one free preventive service in 2011, including the new annual wellness
visit.
Because of the Affordable Care Act, secure, affordable
coverage is becoming a reality for millions of American women and
families. Men and children are also able to take advantage of
preventive services at no extra charge under the health care law. These
services include flu shots and other immunizations, screenings for
cancers, high blood pressure and cholesterol, and depression.
To learn more about the health care services you may be eligible for at no extra charge under the Affordable Care Act, go to http://www.healthcare.gov/prevention
For
information about the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
report on the number of adult and adolescent women eligible for the
preventive services at no charge after Aug. 1, 2012, see http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/2012/womensPreventiveServicesACA/ib.shtml
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