From Law 360
The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) and two other agencies unveiled proposed regulations that for the first time would require private health insurers to cover the full cost of over-the-counter contraception, including male condoms and the morning-after pill, without a prescription.
The DOL, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the Treasury Department jointly unveiled the proposed rules, which would also require insurers to eliminate cost sharing on more FDA-approved prescription birth control and force new disclosures to people enrolled in private health plans to let them know they can get no cost-sharing coverage.
The White House said in a facesheet describing the proposal that if finalized, the policy would expand free birth control coverage for 52 million American women of reproductive age who are covered by private health insurance.