Cthulhu D, on 2012-March-21, 21:33, said:
Given that, preventative care is ridiculously cost effective for any healthcare system that promises to treat you if you turn up in an ER whether you can pay or not.
I like preventive care because I like not getting sick. I'm not sure I have to think about it beyond that. I suppose if the cost were outlandish, say a costly procedure to prevent an unlikely disease, then I might have to think.
Some aspects of contraception seem to be medical care, others not, or at least less so. Being fitted for an internal contraceptive device yes, condoms maybe not. The difference is that one requires a doctor, the other doesn't. If the government thinks, and I don't particularly disagree, that it's a good idea to subsidize condom use then they could just do it. No need to involve insurance companies or doctors. Vegetables are good for us. If the government wants to encourage us to eat vegetables, no doctor is required, no insurance company needs to be forced to give us vegetables.
The OP concerned contraception, so free condoms from the government does not solve the total problem. No doubt the church objects to all forms. I think if a doctor is needed, it's medical, and the church simply has to broadly support medical and not get into what the doctor and the patient are doing.