Sara Rosenbaum, professor of health policy, discusses the implications of the high court’s decision.
July 07, 2014
In a divided 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled last week that certain for-profit companies, if they have religious objections, do not have to provide women the contraceptive coverage that is required under the Affordable Care Act. While the court ruled that the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate as applied to “closely held” businesses violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the court—and the public—have divided opinions on the ruling’s potential implications. While some say that the ruling will enable business owners to invoke their religious rights to deny other types of medical services, other experts believe that the majority of American workers’ health care benefits will not change significantly. Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health policy at the Milken Institute School of Public Health, sat down with George Washington Today to clear up five questions about the court’s controversial ruling. Q: What types of contraceptives may be excluded from private, for-profit businesses’ employee health plans as a result of the Supreme Court’s ruling? Q: What types of businesses does the court’s decision apply to? Q: Do you think that the ruling opens the door for employers to challenge other federal requirements under the Affordable Care Act? For example, might companies try to deny services, such as vaccines or blood transfusions, if they conflict with the owners’ religious beliefs? Q: What are some other potential short-term and long-term implications of this law for workers? Ironically, the workers most likely to be affected are those employed by religiously affiliated nonprofit corporations, such as religiously affiliated hospitals and universities. But this group of employers already is treated separately under the law. In the case of religious nonprofit employers, the law provides a special religious accommodation, which enables an employer to opt out of paying for contraceptive benefits. In such a case, the worker receives her coverage directly from the insurer, which pays for the benefit, and would not notice the difference. This fact figured prominently in the court’s reasoning. Q: What is your opinion on the ruling? Is there a way to balance the protection of employers’ religious beliefs with the protection of their workers’ health? For this reason, it is essential that the Obama administration move expeditiously to create a religious accommodation for all companies, not only those that are nonprofit. It is through an accommodation, such as the one available to nonprofit corporations, that workers can hope to realize the restoration of their benefits, even as the company owners are permitted to opt out of paying for contraceptive coverage. Q. What about the court’s July 3 decision in the Wheaton College case? What effect will it have? The dissenters noted that not only was this type of stay extraordinarily unusual under the court’s own practices, but that it ran directly counter to the majority opinion in Hobby Lobby, gave far too much deference to the “substantial burden” claims of the college,? and substituted the court’s own ideas about what was an acceptable accommodation for those developed through the normal rulemaking process.?? While women are protected for the time being under the Wheaton College plan, observers expect that thousands of religious nonprofits, who object to the? accommodation because in their view it makes them complicit in contraceptive coverage, will rush to Health and Human Services with similar notices.? |
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