The new federal rule, which has been expected for months, is almost certain to be challenged in court. It does not prevent clinics from talking about abortion with patients, just from telling them where they can obtain one. But it removes a requirement that the programs counsel women on all reproductive options, including abortion, a change that would make anti-abortion providers eligible for funding.
The rule is the most recent step in a series of Trump administration efforts to shift the direction of federal health programs toward conservative policies. The administration has expanded the ability for employers to claim religious or moral objections to the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that they offer employees insurance coverage for contraception. It has channeled funding for teen pregnancy prevention programs and family planning grants into programs that emphasize sexual abstinence over contraception.
Some of these changes are being challenged in lawsuits by groups that support reproductive rights, but they have broad support among evangelicals, who constitute a large block of the president’s political base.
The rule announced Friday is not a wholesale defunding of Planned Parenthood, a long-held goal of conservatives. Organizations receiving money through the federal family planning program, called Title X, could still perform abortions but would have to do so in a separate facility from their other operations and adhere to the new requirement that they not refer patients to it.
Organizations that receive federal funds have already been prohibited for years from using that money to finance abortion services. The new rule goes a step further by ordering them to keep separate accounting for their abortion operations.
Many women’s organizations said the new requirements will interfere with health providers’ responsibilities to fully counsel patients about reproductive health.
The “domestic gag rule harms women in more ways than one,” Stephanie Schriock, president of Emily’s List, said in a statement. “It effectively dismantles Title X, forces doctors to lie and forbids them from referring their patients for abortion, and prevents women from being able to access Planned Parenthood’s services.”
Anti-abortion organizations heralded the regulation as a long-sought victory. “The finalized ‘protect life rule’ draws a bright line between abortion and family planning programs,” Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said in a statement, adding that the rule will loosen Planned Parenthood’s “hold on tens of millions of tax dollars.”
Title X provides $286 million in funding for programs that provide services like birth control, screening for breast cancer and cervical cancer, and screening and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. These programs serve about 4 million patients each year, many of them poor, at more than 4,000 clinics. About 40 percent of those clinics are operated by Planned Parenthood, which receives close to $60 million through the family funding program each year.
“In many parts of the country Planned Parenthood is the only provider who participates in the program,” said Dr. Leana Wen, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
She added: “Patients expect their doctors to speak honestly with them, to answer their questions, to help them in their time of need. Imagine if the Trump administration prevented doctors from talking to our patients with diabetes about insulin. It would never happen. Reproductive health care should be no different.”
The new rule is not the first time a Republican administration has tried to withhold family planning funds from organizations that provide abortion counseling or services. In 1988, President Ronald Reagan barred clinics from not only referring patients for abortions but also counseling them about abortions.
That rule was challenged all the way to the Supreme Court, which upheld it in 1991, during the administration of President George H.W. Bush. But the Bush administration did not implement it and in 1993 Bill Clinton became president and eliminated the rule.
Conservative lawmakers hailed the new rule as a long overdue move back toward the Reagan policy, and some were especially pleased by the prospect that anti-abortion health providers could now be eligible for federal family planning funds.
“Importantly, faith-based health organizations will no longer be forced to compromise their pro-life principles to receive government funding,” said Rep. Steve Scalise, the House Republican Whip.
But several medical organizations predicted that the new rule will ultimately leave large numbers of patients, especially low-income and minority women, without access to basic care.
Dr. Niva Lubin-Johnson, president of the National Medical Association, which represents African-American physicians and their patients, said that if Planned Parenthood loses the funding, other providers supported by the program will have to increase their caseloads by an average of 70 percent in order to care for the 1.6 million people who currently receive such services through Planned Parenthood.
“Many providers have already said they would be unable to fill this gap,” Lubin-Johnson said. “This rule will have dire and disproportionate consequences for African-American patients, who make up 22 percent of people who access health care through Title X.”
Most of the changes required by the new regulation will be phased in beginning 60 days after it is published in the Federal Register. Compliance with the financial separation requirement takes effect 120 days after publication and clinics have a year to comply with the physical separation requirements.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.