User:Aaliyah 15/sandbox
New Laws on getting birth control Under the Donald Trump Administration. New facts that are missing from the article "Article evaluation"
According to the New York Times this October 6th of 2017 "The Trump administration on Friday moved to expand the rights of employers to deny women insurance coverage for contraception and issued sweeping guidance on religious freedom that critics said could also erode civil rights protec[1]tions for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people".
According to the Department of Health and Human Services "two rules rolling back a federal requirement that employers must include birth control coverage in their health insurance plans. The rules offer an exemption to any employer that objects to covering contraception services on the basis of sincerely held religious beliefs or moral convictions".
Republican View “The government’s legitimate interests in providing for contraceptive coverage do not require us to violate sincerely held religious beliefs” or moral convictions, the administration said".
According to BBC "The contraceptive coverage mandate had become a hotly contested legal battleground since Obamacare passed in 2009 - with the Democratic administration aggressively pushing back against attempts to carve out sweeping religious exemptions to the women's health provisions of the law".
developing News from BBC "According to some estimates, the contraceptive mandate saved women $1.4bn in its first year in effect. The decision could deal a direct financial blow to women across the US - something they might remember when they head to the polls in 2018".
Everything in the article was relevant to the topic just some new upcoming rules and laws were not stated in the findings. The updated laws are within the last few months but the facts I have above are quoted data and facts that are missing from the birth control law page on Wikipedia if we include this information it would be more up to date and have all the need to know information about the new rules that President Trump has now put in place to effect woman in 2018.
According to Planned Parenthood, birth control pills cost between $15 to $50 a month, depending on health-insurance coverage and type of pill. On an annual basis, that means the Pill costs between $160 to $600.