NDP promises some free birth control options for Manitobans, if elected - Action News
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Manitoba

NDP promises some free birth control options for Manitobans, if elected

The Manitoba NDPsays it'sintent on strengthening provincial health care, and ispromising many free birth control options forManitobans if the NDP forms government following theprovincial election scheduled for October.

Commitment to implement universal coverage of common contraceptive methods pegged at $11M annually

Several people stand around a podium.
Manitoba NDP health critic and Union Station MLA Uzoma Asagwara speaks about the party's vow to cover the cost of select contraceptive methods if elected in the upcoming provincial election on Sunday in Winnipeg's Rossmere neighbourhood. (Nathan Liewicki/CBC)

The Manitoba NDPsays it'sintent on strengthening provincial health care, and ispromising many free birth control options forManitobans if the NDP forms government following theprovincial election scheduled for October.

St. Johns MLA Nahanni Fontaineand Union Station MLA Uzoma Asagwarawere joined by NDP Leader Wab Kinew and a handful of other NDP candidates, physicians and members of the community for Sunday's announcement in Winnipeg's Rossmere neighbourhood.

The NDP's plan would includeuniversal coverage ofseveral prescription and over-the-counterbirth control methods, including the morning-after pill, hormonal injections, copper and hormonal intrauterine devicesandoral contraceptives. Condoms are not included.

Asagwara, the party's health critic, said the commitment to offering some free contraception is a game-changer for several groups, includinglow-income families, people with reproductive health needsand women eager to fully participate in the workforce.

"The impact is huge. We know that there are thousands of Manitobanswho do not have access to the birth control and contraceptives that they need and that are best for their health, simply because they cannot afford it," they said.

The cost to implement the universal coverage of select contraceptives is $11 million per year, according to the NDP.

The party was unable to provide an estimated tally of the number of Manitobans who would be eligible for thecontraceptive coverage.

Three women stand up with a sign.
Manitoba NDP MLAs Uzoma Asagwara, left, and Nahanni Fontaine, right, stand on either side of Dr. Helen Pymar, a Winnipeg obstetrician and gynecologist following Sunday's announcement. (Nathan Liewicki/CBC)

Asagwara says Sunday's announcementstems directly with conversations with the province's health-care employees.

"Unlike Brian Pallister, unlike Heather Stefanson, we're not ignoring the voices of doctors, nurses and allied health-care professionals," Asagwara said.

"Fundamentally, this announcement is about the fact that Manitobans deservequality health care. They deserve health care that is there for them where and when they need it."

Fontaine, the NDP's house leader, says the movement to offerfree birth control options isgaining steam across the country.

Three weeks ago, the British Columbia government announced it will be covering the cost of prescription contraception. That legislation goes into effect on April 1.

The Alberta NDPmade a similar promise earlier this month.

"There's a movement towards not only B.C., not only the announcement in Alberta. There's really a movement all over, across the board, in recognizing people's human rights in accessing free contraceptives," Fontaine said.

"Free contraceptives increases our ability to determine when we want to conceive, when we want to have children or not. It affects personal health decisions, educational opportunities, economic opportunities, housing choices, to name just a few," she said.

The party has been working on its birth control promise for a couple of years, she said, and its's something a local physician is thrilled to hear.

Dr. Helen Pymar, an obstetrician and gynecologist who has been working in Winnipeg since 2004, was elated byB.C.'s announcementon free birth controlin late February. She is also a founding member of Birth Control Access of Manitoba.

"I'm really excited because this means Manitoba might be the next province to be able to offer this," Pymar said.

Pymar says 85 per centof couples who don't useeffectivecontraception methods are likely to become pregnantwithin one year.

Package of birth control pills.
Dr. Helen Pymar says about 85 per centof couplesthat are not using effectivecontraception methods are likely to become pregnantwithin a year. (Rich Pedroncelli/The Associated Press)

The number of unplanned pregnancies would be "drastically reduced" if people, including those from low-income households and those without medical insurance, had access to prescription contraceptives, Pymar said.

"I help those who want contraception methods to help determine their best options and I don't think that their choice should be limited by what they can afford," she said.

Asagwara agreed.

"The reality of it is there are many Manitobansthousands upon thousands of Manitobans who do not have any coverage whatsoever and who do have to pay out of pocket for different methods of contraception," theysaid.

Pymar said that some of these methodscan have added benefits,such as making menstruation lighter and less painful, which can reduce the need for more surgical procedures.

The NDP touted their plan as "significantly different" than what the current government is offering to Manitobans.

The party says their promise will remove barriers that exist for thousands of women, trans men and non-binary people, many of whom are not able to pay for the estimated $20 monthly charge, or $240 annually, to use oral contraceptives.