X

North Country Assemblywoman Jenne 'pleased' legislation passes that will defend women’s reproductive health rights

Posted 1/19/17

North Country Assemblywoman Addie A.E. Jenne, D-Theresa, said she is pleased legislation has passed that will defend women’s reproductive health rights in New York State. The bills affirm a …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

Log in

North Country Assemblywoman Jenne 'pleased' legislation passes that will defend women’s reproductive health rights

Posted

North Country Assemblywoman Addie A.E. Jenne, D-Theresa, said she is pleased legislation has passed that will defend women’s reproductive health rights in New York State.

The bills affirm a woman’s right to choose (A.1748) and ensure contraception is covered by insurers at no cost to the consumer (A.1378).

“For far too long and with recent intensity, those who have no business doing so have tried dictating what a woman should do with her own body,” Jenne, formerly known as Russell, said.

“The Assembly Majority is sending a clear message that we stand with all women and will fight to ensure New Yorkers have access to critical health care services. That fight is even more important today than it has been in the recent past,” she added.

One measure, the Reproductive Health Act, protects a woman’s right to an abortion in New York State (A.1738).

The other bill, the Comprehensive Contraception Coverage Act, requires health insurance companies to cover all FDA-approved contraceptives prescribed by a medical provider at no cost to consumers (A.1378).

“We have come too far to let decades of progress be undone,” Jenne said. She pointed out recent studies have shown the abortion rate in the United States is at its lowest level since the early 1970s, and she said the study's authors credited access to affordable long-term contraceptives as one of the major factors behind that decline.

"We also know providing women with access to affordable contraceptives also makes good fiscal sense for our health care system," Jenne said.

A study by the Brookings Institute, for example, suggested every dollar spent on providing women with long-term reversible contraceptives saves more than $7 in health care and other costs associated with unplanned pregnancies.

The Reproductive Health Act (A.1748, Glick) updates New York State law with protections recognized by the courts under the New York Constitution and United States Constitution.

The bill updates portions of the Penal Law which have not been updated since 1970, three years before the Roe v. Wade decision. This update acknowledges that pregnancy termination is a lawful procedure and eliminates undue burdens on women seeking to exercise the right to make reproductive decisions.

The Comprehensive Contraceptive Coverage Act (A.1378, Cahill), introduced by New York Attorney General Eric T. Scheiderman, would codify the requirement under the Affordable Care Act that all health insurers provide cost-free contraceptive coverage as a part of their insurance policies.

Under the proposal, insurance companies would have to provide cost-free coverage for at least one type of all FDA-approved contraceptives, including emergency contraception.

The bill would also apply to voluntary sterilization procedures, extending coverage to both men and women, and would prohibit insurance companies from using medical management review restrictions to delay contraceptive coverage. In addition, the measure would also allow patients to receive a 12-month supply of contraception at a time.