Millions of women will no
longer have to pay for birth control pills, Pap smears or mammograms
AP
Free birth control led to
dramatically lower rates of abortions and teen births, a large study concludes.
The findings were eagerly anticipated and come as a bitterly contested Obama
administration policy is poised to offer similar coverage.
The project tracked more
than 9,000 women in St. Louis, many of them poor or
uninsured. They were given their choice of a range of contraceptive methods at
no cost — from birth control pills to goof-proof options like the IUD or a
matchstick-sized implant, reports The Associated Press.
When price wasn't an issue,
women flocked to the most effective contraceptives — the implanted options,
which typically cost hundreds of dollars up-front to insert. These women
experienced far fewer unintended pregnancies as a result, reported Dr. Jeffrey
Peipert of Washington University in St. Louis in a study published
Thursday.
The effect on teen pregnancy
was striking: There were 6.3 births per 1,000 teenagers in the study. Compare
that to a national rate of 34 births per 1,000 teens in 2010.
There also were
substantially lower rates of abortion, when compared with women in the metro
area and nationally: 4.4 to 7.5 abortions per 1,000 women in the study,
compared with 13.4 to 17 abortions per 1,000 women overall in the St. Louis region, Peipert calculated.
That's lower than the national rate, too, which is almost 20 abortions per
1,000 women.
In fact, if the program were
expanded, one abortion could be prevented for every 79 to 137 women given a
free contraceptive choice, Peipert's team reported in the journal Obstetrics
& Gynecology.
The findings of the study,
which ran from 2008 to 2010, come as millions of U.S. women are beginning to get
access to contraception without copays under President Barack Obama's health
care law. Women's health specialists said the research foreshadows that
policy's potential impact.
"As a society, we want
to reduce unintended pregnancies and abortion rates. This study has
demonstrated that having access to no-cost contraception helps us get to that
goal," said Alina Salganicoff, director of women's health policy at the
Kaiser Family Foundation.
"It's just an amazing
improvement," Dr. James T. Breeden, president of the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists, said of the results. "I would think if you were against
abortions, you would be 100 percent for contraception access."
The law requires that Food
and Drug Administration-approved contraceptives be available for free for women
enrolled in most workplace insurance plans, a change that many will see as new
plan years begin on Jan. 1.
The policy is among the
law's most contentious provisions because it exempts churches that oppose
contraception but requires religious-affiliated organizations, such as colleges
or hospitals, to provide the coverage for their workers. The U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops and many conservative groups say that violates religious
freedom, and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has voiced similar
criticism.
This week, a federal judge
in St. Louis dismissed a lawsuit challenging the contraception
mandate; nearly three dozen similar suits have been filed around the country.
Thursday's data didn't sway
the critics.
Jeanne Monahan of the
conservative Family Research Council suggested contraceptive use can encourage
riskier sexual behaviour.
"Additionally, one
might conclude that the Obama administration's contraception mandate may
ultimately cause more unplanned pregnancies since it mandates that all health
plans cover contraceptives, including those that the study's authors claim are
less effective," Monahan said.
Here's why this is a public
health issue: Nearly half of the nation's 6 million-plus pregnancies each year
are unintended. An estimated 43 percent of them end in abortion. Low-income
women are far more likely to have an unplanned pregnancy than their wealthier
counterparts.
"We shouldn't have, in
my view, a tiered system where the women with money can get family planning and
the women without cannot," said Peipert, noting that 39 percent of the
women in his study had trouble paying basic expenses.
About half of unplanned
pregnancies occur in women who use no contraception. As for the other half,
condoms can fail and so can birth control pills or other shorter-acting methods
if the woman forgets to use them or can't afford a refill.
In contrast, you can forget
about pregnancy for three years with Implanon, the implant inserted under the
skin of the arm. An IUD, a tiny T-shaped device inserted into the uterus, can
last for five to 10 years, depending on the brand. Change your mind, and the
doctor removes either device before it wears out.
Only about 5 percent of U.S. women use long-acting
contraceptives, far fewer than in other developed countries. Peipert said
insurance hasn't always covered the higher upfront cost to insert them, even
though years of birth control pills can add up to the same price.
Yet three-quarters of his
study participants chose an IUD or Implanon, and a year later 85 percent were
sticking that choice — compared to about half who had initially chosen the
pill, patch or other shorter-acting method.
Cost isn't the only barrier.
Doctors don't always mention long-acting methods, maybe because of a
long-outdated belief that IUDs aren't for young women or just because they
assume women want the most commonly prescribed pill.
That was the case for Ashley
England, 26, of Nashville, Tenn., who enrolled in the study
while in graduate school in St. Louis. She had taken birth
control pills for years but struggled with a $50 monthly copay. She switched to
a five-year IUD, and loves that she and her husband don't have to think about
contraception.
"No one had ever
presented all the options equally," England said. "It's not
telling you what to do. It's giving you a choice unhindered by money."
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