Ensuring the full freedom of women as health care consumers to access
essential preventative health services is a vital component of the
Affordable Care Act (ACA). And nowhere are health decisions more
personal or essential to keep in their hands, than those regarding
reproductive health. The ACA was designed to ensure that health care
decisions are made between a woman and her doctor, and not by her boss,
or Washington politicians.
Today, there are people trying to take this right away from women, by
letting private, for-profit corporations and employers make medical
decisions for their employees, based on their personal beliefs.
A group of for-profit companies are currently suing to gain the right
to deny employees access to coverage for birth control and
contraceptive care, which are used by the overwhelming majority of
American women in their lifetimes. Among the first cases to reach the
Supreme Court is one filed by Hobby Lobby, an arts and crafts chain
whose owners want to be able to take the option for birth control
benefits away from their employees.
We are confident the Supreme Court will agree that health decisions
in this country should remain with individuals, in consultation with
their doctors, families, faiths, and whomever else they personally
trust. No corporate entity should be in position to limit women's legal
access to care, or to seize a controlling interest over the health care
choices of women. To take that type of power away from individuals, and
to let the personal beliefs of a woman's boss dictate her health care
choices would constitute a major step backward for women's health, and
self-determination.
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