For over a decade, the Affordable Care Act (also known as the ACA or Obamacare) has expanded health coverage for tens of millions of people. Before the ACA, insurance plans didn't have to cover basic preventive health care, including breast cancer screenings, Pap tests, and birth control -- or if they did, they could charge people out-of-pocket costs for it.
Before the ACA expanded health coverage, how much do you think people had to pay for birth control?
Before the Affordable Care Act, what percentage of women's out-of-pocket health care spending went to contraception?
A. [0%-10%]
B. [11%-20%]
C. [21%-30%]
D. [More than 30%]
SEE THE ANSWER: [link removed]
Birth control is just one of many essential reproductive health care services that Planned Parenthood not only provides to patients but fights to protect, even as politicians seek to restrict it. Thank you for being a part of this movement.
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