The thought of health insurance without coverage for contraception, mammograms and childbirth? Plainly, it makes us sick.
Tag: Affordable Care Act
The National Women’s Law Center is Suing the Trump Administration and University of Notre Dame for Denying Students Birth Control Coverage
“There’s really no basis for Notre Dame to be telling students that they have to either pay copays and deductibles for their birth control or that they have no coverage for some methods altogether. It’s preposterous—and so, we’re suing them.”
Trump’s Latest Pussy Grab
Women fight back as the president chips away at insurer-covered birth control.
Federal Judge Rules Against Trump Administration’s Contraception Rules
The administration’s rules allow employers, universities and insurers to deny women access to comprehensive reproductive health care coverage by citing religious or moral objections.
The 10 Most Egregious Things about Trump’s New Rules on Birth Control Coverage
How appropriate that these scary new rules went into effect on Friday the 13th!
The Trump Administration Just Dismantled the Affordable Care Act’s Contraceptive Coverage Mandate
“These new rules are, by definition, a discriminatory attack on women.”
The War on Women Report: No. 3
This week, the Trump administration lashed out at a Black woman journalist, spread falsehoods about voting rights, nominated more men but no women as U.S. attorneys, met with anti-choice lobbyists and filed papers to further clear up Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s record.
This Week in the War on Women: Report #1
The War on Women is back, and in full force under the Trump administration. We refuse to go back, and we refuse to let the administration quietly dismantle the progress we’ve made. We are watching. Welcome to the War on Women Report.
The Senate’s Trumpcare Bill Just Got Worse for Women
The Senate’s most recent revision to its Trumpcare bill still slashes Medicaid, and its impacts on women’s health are even more egregious.
Uncovering the Story Left Out of Our Healthcare Discourse
A new study points to an absence of resources, the accumulation of excess wealth, intergenerational trauma and violence against women as factors contributing to women of color experiencing “far worse health and economic outcomes than their white counterparts.”