Sorry, I missed these earlier posts. Seth, Kish, thanks for the respectful responses.
Sethbag wrote:It makes a lot more sense when you think of it as a health issue, rather than a sexcapade issue.
I mean, eating a dozen donuts a day is a foodcapade, if you will, but very few would try to get a person's heart disease treatment defunded by their insurance on the basis of it being the natural result of the person's lifestyle choices.
If we want a food & health comparison, then I think asking insurance companies to fund your choice of birth control is comparable to asking them to fund a healthy diet. My recent decision to go pescetarian is largely a health issue for me, but I'm not asking my insurance to pay for my copy of
Betty Crocker's Easy Everyday Vegetarian, or for my grocery list filled with vegetables, grains, dairy & seafoods.
Conversely, I don't think defunding heart disease treatment because of a person's lifestyle choices is analogous to defunding elective birth control. Birth control (and the sex that attends it)
is the lifestyle choice. That is what people are asking to not fund, just as they're asking to not fund donuts or pescetarian grocery lists. The results (or lack thereof) of using birth control should absolutely be funded by health insurance. So pregnancy, childbirth, and treatment of STDs should be funded. But the choices people are making to arrive at those points generally should not be.