So she (and apparently others) thinks 'other people' should subsidize her costs? Why?
Do you think we should subsidize the costs for other medications such as medications for erectile dysfunction or hypertension? If so, why? Obviously people are going to have differing opinions about what should be subsidized and in these women's opinion, birth control is closer to a necessity than an optional use drug. They're entitled to their opinion and you to yours but they should at least be offered the chance to explain the reasoning for their opinions. This is especially true when 94% of Georgetown's student body opposed the school's policy decision.
If true that's a problem. If the pills are for a legitimate health need she should get them. But this is anecdotal and the correct response is to get her specific situation straightened out, not willy-nilly dole out pills to make sure this doesn't happen again. Such an isolated instance is a very poor basis for sweeping changes.
Yes, she was going to use an anecdote as an example but in her testimony she cites a few statistics to help support her case. She states that 65% of the students were interrogated by insurance representatives or the school's medical staff about why they need the prescription and whether they were lying about their symptoms. Additionally, she also says that 20% of women in situations similar to her anecdote are denied coverage similar to the woman in her anecdote. These are her numbers and I don't know where she got them, so take them as you will
For the most part, I posted up the testimony because I felt that she was indeed qualified to testify during the hearing on HHS's rulemaking. I don't entirely agree with what she has to say but I think she makes valid points, has personal experience with the issue, and has valuable examples of situations where sweeping policies have gaps that need to be addressed. Whether these gaps are addressed with another sweeping policy or one that's more narrowly tailored is something to be considered and petitioned for to the HHS if necessary. But how do you result in a fair policy when only one side of the argument is being portrayed. Trying to narrowly frame this issue as only a religious freedom issue is disingenuous as it entirely involves women's health within it.
Lastly, the biggest problem with the school's policy (since we don't know what other religiously affiliated organizations' policies are, I will address only Georgetown's policy) is that it adorns too much decision-making power of approval or disapproval to those not involved with the actual diagnosis of need for birth control. When a woman's doctor says she needs the pills for health related reasons, then there should not be more rounds of interrogation and second-guessing. All of this could be addressed in a narrower rule than the one proposed by HHS.
No.
She (and others) have claimed it could be as high as $100 per month. We don't have 30 months in any year we use around here.
$3,000 was what she claimed she could earn over the Summer and over the course of law school (several years).
Fern
My fault. I misread her statement on that point. Here are her exact quotes on the cost of birth control:
Without insurance coverage, contraception can cost a woman over $3,000 during law school. For a lot of students who, like me, are on public interest scholarships, that's practically an entire summer's salary. Forty percent of female students at Georgetown Law report struggling financially as a result of this policy
After months of paying over $100 out of pocket, she just couldn't afford her medication anymore and had to stop taking it.
My biggest issue with Georgetown's policy is that they cover contraceptives for the faculty and staff but not for the students. Makes it difficult for it to be a purely religious issue if you're allowing coverage for one segment of your population but not another.