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Contraception Is Free to Women, Except When It鈥檚 Not

Contraception Is Free to Women, Except When It鈥檚 Not

(KHN illustration/Getty Images)

For Stephanie Force, finding a birth control method that she likes and can get without paying out-of-pocket has been a struggle, despite the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 promise of free contraceptives and adolescent girls in most health plans.

The 27-year-old physician recruiter in Roanoke, Virginia, was perfectly happy with the NuvaRing, a flexible vaginal ring that women insert monthly to release hormones to prevent pregnancy. But her insurer, Anthem, stopped covering the branded product and switched her to a generic version in early 2020. Force said the new product left her with headaches and feeling irritable and short-tempered.

After talking to her OB-GYN, Force tried an IUD. But that made her feel worse: She had bad cramps, gained 10 pounds and developed severe hormonal acne. Plus, she was charged $248 for an ultrasound her provider used to guide the insertion of the device, a charge she successfully fought.

Force also considered a couple of birth control products approved in recent years: a non-hormonal vaginal gel called Phexxi and a vaginal ring called Annovera that can be used for a year. But Phexxi isn鈥檛 covered by her employer health plan, and she would owe a $45 copayment for Annovera.

Despite the ACA鈥檚 guarantees of free contraception coverage, Force鈥檚 experience illustrates that even for women whose health plans are subject to the law鈥檚 requirements, obtaining the right product at no cost can be onerous. New types of contraceptives aren鈥檛 automatically incorporated into the federal list of required methods that insurers use to guide coverage decisions. In addition, some health plans continue to discourage use of even long-established methods like IUDs by requiring providers to get approval from the plan before prescribing them.

Consumer advocates who have studied the issue say a process is spelled out in federal rules for women to get the contraceptive they need, but far too few people know that is an option.

selfie portait photo of Stephanie Force
Despite the ACA鈥檚 guarantees of free contraception coverage, Stephanie Force found out firsthand that obtaining the right product at no cost can be onerous. Force says she was unaware of any process she could have used to get the NuvaRing covered without cost sharing. Neither her health care provider nor the insurer mentioned the possibility.(Stephanie Force)

Ultimately, Force went back to the generic version of the NuvaRing, despite the side effects she continues to experience. She鈥檇 prefer to be on the branded NuvaRing, which didn鈥檛 give her problems, and the ping-ponging from method to method has left her exhausted and furious.

鈥淚 cannot believe what hoops I have had to jump through between September 2020 and June 2021,鈥 Force said, 鈥渂etween switching from the generic NuvaRing to the IUD and then back, fighting my insurance and OB-GYN鈥檚 office on the ultrasound charge.鈥

In a statement, Anthem said, 鈥淎nthem health plans cover 222 contraceptive products at $0 cost share on our ACA Preventive List. We cover at least one product鈥 in each of 18 categories of contraception methods approved by the FDA.

Contraception is a very personal choice, and what meets one woman鈥檚 needs may not meet another鈥檚. If avoiding pregnancy is a woman鈥檚 top priority, a virtually fail-safe method like an IUD may be the right solution. But for someone who鈥檚 considering getting pregnant soon, a readily reversible method like a birth control pill might be the best option. Side effects are important to consider as well, since women respond differently to the hormones in various birth control products.

Before the ACA required no-cost birth control coverage, researchers estimate, up to 44% of women鈥檚 out-of-pocket health care spending went toward contraceptives. The ACA required most commercial health plans to cover a comprehensive list of FDA-approved methods without charging women anything. Church plans and religious nonprofits as well as employers and schools that object to contraception are exempt from the coverage requirements. Plans that were grandfathered under the law are also exempt. Uninsured women don鈥檛 benefit from the mandate either.

But the federal rules do not require health plans to cover every contraceptive. After the ACA passed in 2010, the federal Health Resources & Services Administration developed guidelines for women鈥檚 preventive services. Those guidelines say women should have access without cost sharing to a list that covers the , including oral contraceptives, vaginal rings and cervical caps, IUDs, implantable rods and sterilization. Under federal rules, health plans must cover at least one product in each category.

But neither the HRSA guidelines nor a published by the FDA addresses newer methods, including the gel Phexxi, which regulates vaginal acidity to reduce the odds a sperm reaches an egg. It was approved by the FDA last year.

Nor do they incorporate fertility-awareness mobile apps the FDA approved in recent years such as Natural Cycles, which tracks a woman鈥檚 to avoid pregnancy.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a real need for new guidance that keeps up with new methods,鈥 said Mara Gandal-Powers, director of birth control access at the National Women鈥檚 Law Center.

Many insurers have balked at covering Phexxi, said Rameshwari Gupta, director of strategic markets for Evofem Biosciences, which markets Phexxi. A box of 12 single-use applicators 鈥 consumers use one before having sex 鈥 costs $267.50 without insurance, she said.

鈥淲hen I started talking to payers, they all said, 鈥榃here are you on this FDA chart?鈥欌 she said.

According to an FDA spokesperson, the birth control chart is for consumer education purposes only and 鈥渨as not created with the intent of driving coverage decisions.鈥 The agency is in the process of updating it.

In a statement, HRSA said it is reviewing the evidence on contraceptives and expects to complete its review late this year. If it opts to make revisions, it will publish draft recommendations to update the women鈥檚 preventive services guidelines. These will be finalized after a public comment period and become effective a year later.

At this point, health plans consider Phexxi a spermicide and are required to cover only one type of spermicide without cost sharing, said Kristine Grow, a senior vice president at AHIP, a health insurance trade organization.

鈥淚f Phexxi is indeed considered a new 鈥榤ethod鈥 of contraception, both the FDA and would need to make this clear,鈥 she added.

The vaginal ring Annovera, approved by the FDA in 2018, is typically covered by health plans, according to Grow, though it may not be available without cost sharing. The average retail price is $2,457 a year, according to GoodRx.

One way plans have made it difficult for women to access certain contraceptives, even those on the list of approved methods, is by requiring that their providers get approval from the insurer first, often by providing documentation that the product is medically necessary.

Under UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 for Phexxi, for example, before coverage will be authorized, members must have documented reasons that they are unable to use eight other contraceptive methods, including oral contraceptives, the contraceptive patch, a vaginal ring, injections and spermicides. Providers also must attest that they have counseled patients that Phexxi is less effective at preventing pregnancy than some other methods.

In a statement, UHC said it covers 鈥渁 broad array鈥 of generic and brand-name options, and it follows scientific evidence to develop its list.

Yet consumers have a way to get the specific drug that is most appropriate for them, according to by the National Women鈥檚 Law Center.

Under federal rules, if a doctor or other health care provider determines that a patient needs a particular contraceptive, even if it鈥檚 not on the list of approved products for the patient鈥檚 plan, the insurer is required to have an expedient process for the patient to seek a waiver.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not up to the insurance company whether to cover that method; it鈥檚 up to the provider,鈥 said Adam Sonfield, executive editor for policy analysis at the Guttmacher Institute, a research and advocacy organization focused on women鈥檚 reproductive health.

But according to the National Women鈥檚 Law Center report, many insurers, patients and their providers aren鈥檛 aware of the requirement, and state agencies don鈥檛 enforce these so-called exceptions policies.

If patients run into trouble getting the method they want, 鈥渨e typically recommend filing an appeal with their insurance provider,鈥 said Gretchen Borchelt, vice president for reproductive rights and health at the National Women鈥檚 Law Center.

Stephanie Force said she was unaware of any process she could have used to get the NuvaRing covered without cost sharing. Neither her health care provider nor the insurer mentioned the possibility.

She recently had an appointment with a new provider, who she hopes will be a better advocate for her.