Right now, a growing number of businesses are pledging to guarantee birth control coverage for their workers.
Why? Because it's essential health care that helps workers thrive, and because access to birth control fosters more equitable, inclusive working environments.
Sexual and reproductive health care is under threat in the U.S. and around the world. In case you missed it, the Supreme Court ruled that your boss or university — based on their personal objections — can decide if your health insurance covers your birth control.
Businesses that pledge to be a #BusinessforBC are helping to educate and inspire others in the business community to show their support for accessible birth control for all people. These companies know that access to birth control improves economic and health outcomes.
Nearly 90% of women of reproductive age have used contraception in their lifetimes, and access to birth control has been proven to
increase education level and wage earning.
Businesses are
proudly displaying their pledge to provide and protect access to birth control and reproductive health care with #BusinessforBC badges on their social media. And last month, Alexis McGill Johnson joined The Female Quotient
to discuss ways companies can advance diversity and inclusion through investment in employee and community health care, particularly for women and Black and LGBTQ+ communities.
Pledging to guarantee birth control access is part of a larger commitment to racial and gender equity: Women of color, especially Black and Indigenous women, face disproportionate barriers to accessing affordable health care. Access to a full range of sexual and reproductive health services is key to addressing historical disparities in unintended pregnancy, maternal mortality rates, and higher rates of breast and cervical cancer.
We have a long way to go, but committing to birth control coverage is one step toward greater racial equity in the workforce and more inclusive economic growth.
Learn more about #BusinessforBC.