OPINION

EDITORIAL: Effects of Title X withdrawal

If you're a woman of limited means in need of reproductive health care, prepare to wait a long time or drive a long way for it. As of Monday evening, all Planned Parenthood affiliates will have officially withdrawn from the federal Title X program, which has provided funding for family planning and reproductive health care for low-income individuals for nearly half a century.

They're leaving because the Trump administration has foisted upon Title X grant recipients a ludicrous rule that would, among other things, forbid health-care providers to refer patients to an abortion service when they request one. At most, providers can offer a list of comprehensive health-care centers that may or may not include abortion services--and the provider can't tell the patient which is which.

That's a gag rule. Providers of Title X services must also refer patients to prenatal care whether they ask for it or not. That's forced speech.

This is not the government prohibiting funding for abortions. Congress has been doing that for decades. This is the government restricting health-care professionals from offering comprehensive care to their patients.

This is devastating news for the patients who rely on the clinics that have chosen to withdraw from the program, which serves roughly 4 million people (40 percent of them through Planned Parenthood facilities). Planned Parenthood says it does not plan to close any clinics yet, but it's likely to cut back its hours of service. That means contraception and other reproductive health care will be harder to come by, particularly in rural areas where the Title X withdrawal will have the most impact.

Nor do industry experts believe other community health clinics will pick up the slack, as the Trump administration has predicted. Even if those clinics were willing to try, it would take years for the ones already serving broad populations to be able to take on hundreds of new reproductive care patients.

Congressional Democrats reacted by passing an annual spending bill for HHS that would block the rule. The GOP-controlled Senate should concur; after all, Title X is a bipartisan creation signed into law by President Nixon, and it has a long history of helping low-income women get the contraception and health care they need.

It's deeply troubling to see that being upended by Trump's medically unnecessary gag rule.

Editorial on 08/23/2019

Upcoming Events