WASHINGTON — The Obama administration issued a new rule Friday aimed at ending its years-long fight with religious groups over the part in its landmark health care law that requires companies to cover contraceptives.

Employers will be allowed to register their objections to paying for such coverage, after which the U.S. government will step in and extend the coverage to women seeking it, according to the rule, published in the federal register Friday.

“Women across the country deserve access to recommended preventive services that are important to their health, no matter where they work,” Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell said in a statement. “Today’s announcement reinforces our commitment to providing women with access to coverage for contraception, while respecting religious considerations raised by nonprofit organizations and closely held for-profit companies.”

The step is the administration’s latest attempt to accommodate religiously affiliated nonprofits and businesses that object to providing the contraception coverage while also making the coverage available to women.

Despite several adjustments to the law, the groups – including Catholic hospitals, schools and some privately held businesses – have repeatedly argued that the so-called contraception mandate forces them to violate their religious beliefs.

The new rule follows a Supreme Court decision in June that said some private employers have a right to be exempted from the law on religious grounds, a ruling that was seen as a victory for social conservatives.

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The court also granted Wheaton College, a small Christian school in Illinois, a temporary exemption, suggesting the court might issue an even broader blow to the mandate if the Obama administration did not tweak the law.

It’s not clear whether the latest revision will satisfy the religious groups, which are seeking a full exemption from the mandate, like the one granted to churches. Lori Windham, lawyer for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, which represents Wheaton and others, said earlier Friday that the group was reserving judgment until the rule was published.

Under the previous accommodation worked out last year, religiously affiliated nonprofits that object to covering some or all contraceptives for employees were supposed to file a form certifying their objection and notifying their insurers.

After that, their insurance carriers would step in to provide the coverage at no added cost. Insurers have been willing to go along with that idea on the belief that the cost of paying for contraceptives is offset by the savings from not having to pay for pregnancies.


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