Breaking it Down: The Health Care
Law and Women
The President's health
law gives hard working, middle-class families the security they deserve. The Affordable Care Act forces
insurance companies to play by the rules, prohibiting them from dropping your
coverage if you get sick, billing you into bankruptcy through annual or
lifetime limits, and, soon, discriminating against anyone with a pre-existing
condition.
In the past, women often
had to pay more for coverage that sometimes didn’t even cover their needs –
that’s changing under the health care law. Over 20 million women with private
health insurance are receiving expanded preventive services with no
cost-sharing, including mammograms, cervical cancer screenings, prenatal care,
flu and pneumonia shots, and regular well-baby and well-child visits. What’s
more, 1.1 million women between 19 and 25 who would have been uninsured, have
coverage under their parent’s health insurance plan. Women are often the ones
making health care decisions for the family. The health care law puts them back
in charge by shining much-needed light on our health insurance marketplace and
cracking down on unjustified premium hikes.
Here are more ways the
law helps women:
1. Soon, being a woman will
no longer be a pre-existing condition. Before the Affordable
Care Act became law, insurance companies selling individual policies could deny
coverage to women due to “pre-existing conditions,” such as having cancer and
being pregnant. In 2014, it will be illegal for insurance companies to
discriminate against anyone with a pre-existing condition, including women.
Already, insurance companies are banned from denying coverage
to children because of a pre-existing condition.
2. Women Have a Choice of Doctor. Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, all
Americans in new insurance plans have the freedom to choose from any primary
care provider, OB-GYN, or pediatrician in their health plan’s network, or
emergency care outside of the plan’s network, without a referral.
3. Women Can Receive Preventive Care Without Copays. Thanks to the
Affordable Care Act, all Americans in new health care plans can receive
recommended preventive services, like mammograms, new baby care and well-child
visits, with no out-of-pocket costs. See a list of
preventive services for women.
4. Women Pay Lower Health
Care Costs.
Before the law, women could be charged more for individual insurance policies
simply because of their gender. A 22-year-old woman could be charged 150% the
premium that a 22-year-old man paid. In 2014, insurers will not be able to
charge women higher premiums than they charge men. In addition, the law takes
strong action to control health care costs, including helping States crack down
on excessive premium increases and making sure most of your
premium dollars go for your health care.
PERSONAL STORIES
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