HHS has issued new guidelines for Title X Family Planning Service Grants that prioritize reducing overmedicalization by addressing underlying behavioral and lifestyle factors. The 2027 guidance states that organizations that receive Title X grant funding should address the chronic disease epidemic by focusing on underlying lifestyle and behavioral factors that contribute to worsening fertility, pregnancy, and long-term health outcomes.

The guidance affirms the agency’s goal of addressing root causes of poor health outcomes affecting fertility and reproductive health, including nutrition, physical activity, sleep, and exposure to harmful chemicals and environmental toxins. They are looking to address conditions such as hormonal imbalances, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and uterine fibroids that affect women. They are looking to address conditions that affect men, including low sperm count, low sperm motility, low testosterone levels, and erectile dysfunction. Organizations applying for Title X funds may also address lifestyle and behavioral factors that influence hormonal function, such as sleep quality, nutrition, physical activity, and pornography use.

HHS talks about the reduced use of contraception by females from 65% down to 54% based on CDC numbers, while explaining that the most common reason for not using contraception was side effects, including hormonal birth control pills and an IUD. Up to half of women who use oral contraceptives have side effects that include mood swings, nausea, breakthrough bleeding, headaches, decreased libido, and weight gain.

In addition to that, there are known serious side effects, including venous thromboembolism, myocardial infarction, stroke, hypertension, hepatocellular adenoma, hepatocellular carcinoma, cervical cancer, breast cancer, skin cancer, and gallbladder disease.

The new guidance emphasizes the importance of body literacy as a tool for diagnosing health conditions and fertility issues more quickly. HHS will require Title X family planning clinics to provide body and health literacy as part of their reproductive health counseling. This includes educating patients on menstrual cycle physiology, hormonal health, male and female fertility, awareness, and early indicators of reproductive disorders like endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), thyroid dysfunction, metabolic disorders, and other conditions that often emerge during adolescence.

The HighWire spoke with Dr. Naomi Whittaker in October after the Trump administration announced it would be making In-Vitro Fertilization (IVF) treatments more accessible to encourage families with fertility difficulties to pursue alternate routes for having children. Dr. Whittaker, a minimally invasive gynecologic and restorative surgeon, said hormonal birth control is touted by OBGYN clinics as the one-size-fits-all approach to women’s health issues. She said this approach is pushed on the basis that birth control is a “healthier state of being than ovulation” because ovulation is a risk factor for ovarian cancer. Dr. Whittaker said that the risk is very low.

Dr. Whittaker utilizes the Creighton Model FertilityCare System, which helps couples track the fertile window. This can help couples achieve their goals of getting pregnant or not getting pregnant without utilizing hormonal birth control or potentially unnecessary fertility medications. Only 12.7% of women could correctly identify their fertile window according to a 2013 study. A more recent study from 2025 found that 41% of women trying to conceive did not know or were unsure of when their fertile window is.

Dr. Whittaker also explained that birth control often masks underlying conditions that contribute to infertility. She said these conditions are underdiagnosed and not considered by many OBGYNs before they refer couples to IVF clinics, which she said is technically experimental therapy.

“This is not something that we know the long-term health and safety outcomes of the offspring,” Dr. Whittaker said. “And we know there’s a high death rate of the offspring. Starting at not only the embryo stage, but during each trimester of pregnancy, we know there’s a high loss of life of embryos and fetuses. So stillbirth is increased across every single trimester. Birth defects are increased in these children, including preterm births and cancers. The further you look at the data – three months, six months, five years – the more you find that these people have cancers as well.”

In addition to concerns about overmedicalization, the new guidance makes it clear that the administration will ask Title X recipients to abide by the Hyde Amendment that strictly prohibits the use of funds for abortion-related services. The guidance notes that the agency expects recipients to maintain a “strict separation” of Title X services and abortion.

HHS began an investigation last month into 13 states for allegedly “coercing health care entities to provide coverage of, or pay for, abortion contrary to conscience,” which the administration says would be a violation of the Weldon Amendment. In January, the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) repudiated a legal position it held under the Biden administration in 2021 that determined health care entities can be required by state law to cover and/or pay for abortions. In 2021, the Biden administration OCR sent a letter rescinding a 2020 violation letter sent by the Trump administration. Now, the second Trump administration is reverting to its interpretation before President Biden took office.  

In 2019, Trump implemented a rule that banned Title X clinics from referring patients for abortions or discussing them as an option. All Planned Parenthood clinics quit the program after the rule was implemented, and most of them returned to the program after President Biden repealed the rule in 2021. A formal rule similar to the 2019 Protect Life rule is expected, which may lead Planned Parenthood to once again exit the program.

Steven Middendorp

Steven Middendorp is an investigative journalist, musician, and teacher. He has been a freelance writer and journalist for over 20 years. More recently, he has focused on issues dealing with corruption and negligence in the judicial system. He is a homesteading hobby farmer who encourages people to grow their own food, eat locally, and care for the land that provides sustenance to the community.

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