In March 2012, Liza Love of Glendale, Arizona had to testify before her state’s Senate Judiciary Committee about why she takes birth control pills.
The country was awash in talk of birth control after new regulations in the Affordable Care Act required contraception coverage in insurance plans without a co-pay. In fact, Arizona state law had been requiring plans to cover contraception for years. But the politics had changed, it was an election year, and suddenly the existing religious opt-out wasn’t enough. As Majority Whip Debbie Lesko put it at the time, “I believe we live in America. We don’t live in the Soviet Union.”
Love explained to lawmakers that birth control had ended years of pain, easing her struggle with polycystic ovary syndrome and endometriosis.
The committee listened. The final version of the bill, signed into law by Jan Brewer that year, provided reimbursement if an employee provided written proof that there were “medical indications other than for contraceptive, abortifacient, or sterilization purposes.” Only upon protest did legislators include language that pointed out that employment discrimination law exists – i.e., you can’t be fired for using birth control.
So what if an employee who got that reimbursement had sex without intending to have a baby? Would she have to give the money back? Unclear. As for employees of religious objectors who simply wanted to have sex without getting pregnant, well, those strumpets were out of luck.
In the wake of the Supreme Court recognizing an even broader right to refuse contraceptive coverage last week, the conversation about the medical uses of contraception has been revisited. That information is important; it affects millions of women like Love, who was brave to share her personal medical information in service of other women.
But as the Arizona example shows, it won’t get the even greater number of women who use birth control as, well, birth control very far. And it certainly won’t stave off the rank misogyny that surrounds so many discussions of women’s health. In fact, treating medically-indicated contraception as a trump card only risks perpetuating the stigma that already surrounds sexuality in general — and female sexuality in particular.
Take a recent National Journal piece entitled “One Big Thing Everyone Is Missing In Hobby Lobby” — that one big thing being that many women take birth control for medical reasons. Well, not everyone missed it, since, as author Lucia Graves notes at the outset, medically-indicated usage was pointed out in Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s widely-shared dissent. In fact, it was in the federal government’s brief to the court (on page 47), not to mention an entire amicus brief from the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance.
“We’ve tried to recast that debate to orient the Court to the fact that there’s more going on here than pregnancy and contraception, but ultimately the Court went with the way Hobby Lobby had characterized it,” an attorney who co-wrote that brief told Graves.
But a member of the Court’s majority in Hobby Lobby did note medical necessity: “There are many medical conditions for which pregnancy is contraindicated,” wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy in his concurrence, adding that he agreed that the coverage requirement “furthers a legitimate and compelling interest in the health of female employees.” That recognition still didn’t stop him from voting in favor Hobby Lobby.
As it turns out, some advocates have been trying to “recast that debate” for years. The most famous person to do it was Sandra Fluke, an attorney and activist now running for state Senate in California. As Graves points out in a second story, few people remember that her testimony focused on a friend with polycystic ovarian syndrome; they remember Rush Limbaugh calling her a slut. Even fewer people remember that the Georgetown plan Fluke’s friend was on actually had a medical exception and she still couldn’t get the coverage she needed.









