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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has finally cleared up the confusion surrounding what was and wasn’t guaranteed under the Affordable Care Act in relation to FDA-approved contraceptives, physician recommended sex-specific services, ect. They now ensure:

  • Access to all the FDA approved contraceptive methods such as barrier, hormonal, and implanted ones, and proscribed patient education/counseling. Cost sharing can be used to encourage generic IUDs- but if a doctor recommends a specific device, it must be fully covered
  • Access to all FDA identified forms of oral contraceptives
  • Access to sex-specific services recommended by physicians such as mammograms and pap smears regardless of sex assigned at birth and without cost sharing.
  • Covered dependent children must also be covered for any services applicable to them
  • No cost sharing for routine immunizations, evidence-based preventive care and screening for infants, children and adolescents; screenings for women with high risk of breast, ovarian, tubal or peritoneal cancer; genetic testing for women with positive screenings and women with personal histories of cancer even if they are asymptomatic, and physician recommended anesthesia for a preventive colonoscopy

Our CEO, Bré Thomas, hopes that these clarifications will help low-income individuals covered by ACA to understand all the resources available to them and straighten out confusion about the ACA’s provisions relating to family planning.

 – Frankie O’Neill, Summer Intern