Herald on Sunday

‘I’m continuing to be targeted’

Influencer cleared after complaints to advertisin­g body

- Alanah Eriksen

Complaints over social media posts influencer Simone Anderson made about collecting her baby’s umbilical cord blood have been dismissed by the Advertisin­g Standards Authority.

But the decision reveals the nature of the complaints, with Anderson accused of deleting comments by medical profession­als who questioned the practice.

Anderson, who is in her third trimester, worked with New Zealand company CordBank, which stores stem cells from babies’ umbilical cord blood in case they need them to treat a medical condition later in life. But medical experts debate the benefits.

The process costs $2900 upfront and $225 a year for storage. The company has been going since 2002 but recently started using influencer­s.

The ASA received five complaints. One pointed to the fact Anderson’s posts, on Instagram and Facebook, said “you have one chance to do this”.

“I believe she is preying on a vulnerable audience being pregnant women and parents who may not be able to afford this service and she is implying there is no other option to save your child’s life. New Zealand is part of the stem cell and internatio­nal bone marrow network and if your child was sick your oncologist would use this network for donor products.”

The complainan­t said that in the comments section, Anderson claimed the procedure could be done with delayed cord clamping — when the umbilical cord stays attached so blood can flow back to the baby.

“Many registered midwives have commented to say this is not possible — Simone deleted these comments after 48 hours. When I contacted Simone with my concerns she blocked me.”

Another complainan­t said: “The advertisin­g is one-sided and comments providing informatio­n that cord blood banking is harmful to newborn babies are being deleted by Simone. I believe this to be misleading, deceiving and abuses the trust of consumers and exploits the lack of knowledge of the public.”

In her response to the ASA, Anderson said she and husband Trent Forsyth had planned to bank their baby’s cord blood before connecting with the company and had worked with them to create accurate content.

Anderson has been referred to the ASA several times over other posts.

“Given that CordBank has been conveying similar messages to mine for over 19 years across various media platforms — including social media — it would be reasonable to assume I am continuing to be targeted by individual­s who incite their followers to report my social media content to the ASA.

“As I’ve mentioned before to the ASA, as a result of this targeting I am hyper-vigilant of only accepting campaign work with messaging which has been fully sanctioned by my agents; any advertisin­g or PR agencies involved, and the client’s advisers. I am aware that everything I post is under scrutiny and go out of my way to ensure my content complies with regulation­s.”

She said her posts display comments from people for and against the practice. “Any comments I limited were due to personal attacks on me as a person.”

CordBank said it was licensed by the Ministry of Health, audited by Medsafe and it was confident all claims made could be substantia­ted by scientific evidence.

Most of the ASA board said the posts met the standard of social responsibi­lity and did not portray unrealisti­c outcomes or prey on vulnerable audiences. A minority said the text over-promised “about what is currently achievable through this service”.

I believe . . . she is implying there is no other option to save your child’s life. Complainan­t

 ??  ?? Simone Anderson and Trent Forsyth in her post promoting CordBank.
Simone Anderson and Trent Forsyth in her post promoting CordBank.

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