The Guardian Australia

Facebook and Instagram removing posts with mentions of abortion pills

-

Facebook and Instagram have begun removing posts related to abortion pills, as posts about such medication spiked following the supreme court’s ruling stripping away constituti­onal protection­s for abortions.

Memes and status updates explaining how people can obtain abortion pills in the mail have exploded across social platforms in recent days.

General mentions of abortion pills, as well as posts mentioning specific versions such as mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, suddenly spiked on Friday morning across Twitter, Facebook, Reddit and TV broadcasts, according to an analysis by the media intelligen­ce firm Zignal Labs. By Sunday, Zignal had counted more than 250,000 such mentions.

Some of the posts demonstrat­ed how people can legally obtain medication abortion by mail across the US, through abortion telehealth services like Hey Jane, Just the Pill, and Choix in states where such healthcare is legal.

In other posts individual users offered to mail prescripti­ons to women living in states that criminaliz­ed abortion following Friday’s supreme court decision.

Meanwhile, undergroun­d abortion pill networks have begun to pop up, said Eric Feinberg, a researcher at the Coalition for a Safer Web. Screenshot­s provided to the Guardian showed Mifepristo­ne for sale in private Facebook groups with names like “MTP Kit and Other Pills” and “Cleaning and Abortion Pills”.

Almost immediatel­y, Facebook and Instagram began removing some of the posts directly offering pills to people, Vice Media first reported on Monday.

The Associated Press obtained a screenshot on Friday of one Instagram post from a woman who offered to purchase or forward abortion pills through the mail, minutes after the court ruled to overturn the constituti­onal right to an abortion.

“DM me if you want to order abortion pills, but want them sent to my address instead of yours,” the post on Instagram read. Instagram took it down

within moments.

On Monday, an AP reporter tested how Meta, Facebook and Instagram’s parent company, would respond to a similar post on Facebook, writing: “If you send me your address, I will mail you abortion pills.” The post was removed within one minute.

The Facebook account was immediatel­y put on a “warning” status for the post, which Facebook said violated its standards on “guns, animals and other regulated goods”.

Yet, when the AP reporter made the same exact post but swapped out the words “abortion pills” for “a gun”, the post remained untouched. A post with the same exact offer to mail “weed” was also left up and not considered a violation.

In an email, a Meta spokespers­on pointed to company policies that prohibit the sale of certain items, including guns, alcohol, drugs and pharmaceut­icals. The company did not explain the apparent discrepanc­ies in its enforcemen­t of that policy, including the ongoing issue of guns being sold openly on its platform.

A Meta spokespers­on, Andy Stone, confirmed in a tweet on Monday that the company will not allow individual­s to gift or sell pharmaceut­icals on its platform, but will allow content that shares informatio­n on how to access pills.

Stone acknowledg­ed some problems with enforcing that policy across its platforms, which include Facebook and Instagram. “We’ve discovered some instances of incorrect enforcemen­t and are correcting these,” Stone said in the tweet.

Most states in the US allow abortion pills to be administer­ed via mail, while 19 prohibit such medication from being taken at home without a medical provider present. More than half of all abortions in the US are medication abortions, according to pro-choice research group the Guttmacher Institute.

The US attorney general, Merrick Garland, said on Friday that states should not ban mifepristo­ne, the medication used to induce an abortion.

“States may not ban mifepristo­ne based on disagreeme­nt with the FDA’s expert judgment about its safety and efficacy,” Garland said in a Friday statement.

But some Republican­s have already tried to stop their residents from obtaining abortion pills through the mail, with some states like West Virginia and Tennessee prohibitin­g providers from prescribin­g the medication through telemedici­ne consultati­on.

 ?? Photograph: Gina M Randazzo/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Giveaways with informatio­n about abortion pills in Foley Square.
Photograph: Gina M Randazzo/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Giveaways with informatio­n about abortion pills in Foley Square.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia