New data from Media Matters reveals that Facebook has earned tens of thousands in revenue from anti-abortion organizations running ads with misinformation about medication abortion procedures and so-called “abortion pill reversal,” despite the platform’s ad policies against health misinformation. These anti-abortion Facebook ads have been seen millions of times.
In June, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, ending the constitutional right to abortion and triggering abortion bans in states across the country. Aware of the consequences of the decision and of an increase in the demand for medication abortions, both President Joe Biden and Attorney General Merrick Garland promised to defend access to abortion pills, including in states that are moving to ban the federally approved medications.
For years, anti-abortion activists have pushed lies about abortion pills, falsely claiming that there is a safe and effective procedure for “reversing” medication abortions by flooding the body with progesterone, the hormone that promotes fetal growth. In 2019, the American Medical Association described these methods as experimental and unethical. That same year, a study designed to investigate “abortion pill reversal” was abruptly ended due to safety concerns after several participants were hospitalized. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists writes that “claims regarding abortion ‘reversal’ treatment are not based on science and do not meet clinical standards,” noting that they are designed “to cause confusion and perpetuate stigma, and to steer women to this unproven medical approach” which will “compromise patient care and safety.”
Facebook claims to prohibit advertisements that make “deceptive, false, or misleading” health claims, but the platform seemingly allows users to violate this policy as they push misinformation about medication abortions by sharing purported educational resources, praise doctors and pregnancy centers for supposedly “saving babies” with the process and falsely claim that “abortion pill reversal” has saved as many as “3,000 lives,” as well as telling stories about people who sought it.