The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) officials
also said the department was issuing a new regulation aimed at
protecting healthcare workers' civil rights based on religious and
conscience objections.
The regulation protects the rights of healthcare workers from
providing abortion, euthanasia, and sterilization, the officials
said during a media call with reporters.
On Thursday, HHS said it was creating a new division that would
focus on conscience and religious objections, a move it said was
necessary after years of the federal government forcing healthcare
workers to provide such services.
HHS will issue a letter on Friday to state Medicaid offices
rescinding 2016 guidance that the Obama administration gave after
states including Indiana had tried to defund abortion providers such
as Planned Parenthood.
The guidance "restricted states' ability to take certain actions
against family-planning providers that offer abortion services," HHS
said in a statement.
The Medicaid program, jointly funded by states and the federal
government, provides healthcare services to the poor and disabled.
Federal law prohibits Medicaid or any other federal funding for
abortion services.
The move is the Trump administration's latest effort to roll back
policies developed under former President Barack Obama.
"You are watching a struggle over abortion politics," said Robin
Wilson, a professor at University of Illinois College of Law. "In a
sense you're allowing state Medicaid regulators, through regulation,
to reopen a whole can of worms around women’s health."
Wilson said the impact could be immediate in states which, before
the Obama-era guidance, had been working to effectively defund or
limit funding to providers such as Planned Parenthood, which provide
abortions but bill them separately so that they are not paid for by
Medicaid.
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Dawn Laguens, executive vice president for the Planned Parenthood
Action Fund, said the move encourages states to block access to care
at Planned Parenthood.
"The law is clear: it is illegal to bar women from seeking care at
Planned Parenthood. Longstanding protections within Medicaid
safeguard every person's right to access care at their qualified
provider of choice," Laguens said in a statement.
NEW RULE
The rule will enforce statutes that guarantee these civil rights.
Roger Severino, director of the Office of Civil Rights at HHS, said
the office had received 34 complaints since Trump took office last
January.
Experts on Thursday said the move to protect workers on religious
grounds raised the possibility it could provide legal cover for
otherwise unlawful discrimination, and encourage a broader range of
religious objections.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer in New York and Yasmeen Abutaleb in
Washington; Editing by Paul Simao and Richard Chang)
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