News

ACA contraception mandate hits legal snag


 

A federal appeals court has ruled that the Affordable Care Act mandate that employers provide free coverage of contraception violates the right to religious freedom.

In a 2-1 decision delivered Nov. 1, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit reversed a lower court ruling and granted an injunction allowing two business owners temporary relief from the contraception mandate.

©Tina Sbrigato/iStockphoto.com

A federal appeals court has ruled that the Affordable Care Act mandate that employers provide free coverage of contraception violates the right to religious freedom.

In Gilardi v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Francis and Philip Gilardi, brothers and the owners of Freshway Food and Freshway Logistics in Ohio, sued the government for the right to exclude coverage of contraception and sterilization in their self-insured health plan. The brothers, who are Catholic, have a religious objection to paying for coverage of those services.

At issue is the provision in the ACA that requires employers to cover preventive services, including all contraceptive methods approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The requirement applies to most employers, except for certain religious institutions.

The appeals court said the government placed a substantial burden on the Gilardi brothers by forcing them to choose between violating their religious beliefs or paying penalties totaling more than $14 million per year.

The federal appeals court awarded a temporary injunction to the Gilardi brothers and sent the case back to the lower court for consideration.

mschneider@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @MaryEllenNY

Recommended Reading

Many women physicians regret delaying reproduction
MDedge ObGyn
Azelaic acid 15% gel tames women’s acne
MDedge ObGyn
Women surgeons are more likely to use assisted reproductive technology, have fewer children
MDedge ObGyn
Hormone therapy’s protection against endometrial cancer persists in Women’s Health Initiative follow-up study
MDedge ObGyn
New HPV vaccine promises to prevent 85% of invasive cervical cancer
MDedge ObGyn
Studies link maternal smoking with broad range of infant infections
MDedge ObGyn
Endovascular coiling aids pelvic congestion syndrome
MDedge ObGyn
Single dose of HPV16/18 vaccine appears immunogenic
MDedge ObGyn
Risk-based screening misses hepatitis C in many pregnant women
MDedge ObGyn
Despite incentives, many couples aim for twins with IVF
MDedge ObGyn