<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/feb/25/google-adverts-direct-pregnant-women-anti-abortion-groups>

Women seeking online advice about abortions are being directed to pregnancy 
counselling services run by anti-abortion campaigners, an Observer 
investigation has found.

Google adverts that are styled to look like real search results and appear 
above genuine listings are routinely being shown to people searching key terms 
relating to pregnancy and abortion.

In an analysis this month, 117 out of 251 adverts shown by Google UK to a user 
searching 40 key phrases, including “NHS abortion advice”, “confidential 
abortion support” and “pregnant teenager help”, were from groups opposed to 
abortion.

The findings reveal the marketing efforts of anti-abortion groups in the UK and 
have led to concerns that women could be exposed to biased information when 
seeking out medical advice. One sexual health charity described the advertising 
as “clearly immoral”.

The adverts in the analysis – which were offered to a woman in her 20s in 
London in early February – contain a small tag marking them as advertising but 
look similar to real search results and appear above trusted information 
sources, including the NHS website. In some cases they promote advice services 
that claim to offer impartial support but do not clearly state the 
anti-abortion views of the people behind them.

One of the biggest advertisers was Pregnancy Crisis Helpline, whose adverts 
appeared after searches for 14 out of the 40 phrases tested in the analysis. 
They included one that said: “Considering an abortion? Talk to someone,” and 
appeared after searches for “buy abortion pill” and “pregnant teenager help”.

People clicking on the links were taken to the helpline’s website, which says 
it is a “safe and confidential place” offering “support for women struggling 
with an unplanned pregnancy”.

But while it says it does “not refer for abortions”, neither does it offer 
information about its organisers’ anti-abortion views and presents itself as an 
impartial service offering support “away from all the pressures”.

In reality, the helpline was co-launched with Christian Concern, a rightwing 
evangelical organisation that wants abortion to be banned. The helpline’s 
trustees include Regan King, a pastor at the Angel church in Islington, London, 
who has described abortion as “Disgusting. Disturbing. Grim. Gruesome. 
Horrifying. Shocking. Terrible. Vile” and likened it to “the new slave trade”. 
Another trustee is Christian Clive Copus, a former director of the 
anti-abortion campaign group the Prolife Alliance.

The helpline has recently reported a spike in the number of people contacting 
it, saying it had 2,000 clients in 2022 compared with 500 in 2021.

Other Google adverts directed women to a counselling service run by the charity 
Life, which opposes abortion. One said: “We provide a safe space for you to 
explore your feelings away from outside pressures. Talk through your options in 
confidence.”

Google said the adverts flagged by the Observer complied with its rules, 
highlighting that they contain an “ad” tag in bold lettering and a line stating 
that the services they promote do not provide abortions.


But Lisa Hallgarten, head of policy at young people’s sexual health charity 
Brook, described the marketing approach as “clearly immoral” and said adverts 
provided to those searching terms such as “NHS abortion advice” could delay 
women’s access to healthcare.

“We are really concerned that people looking for impartial support are being 
directed to organisations and websites where they could experience the complete 
opposite,” she said. Pam Lowe, an expert on anti-abortion activism, said: 
“Anyone who puts ‘NHS abortion’ into Google should be shown a link to the NHS 
website as the first result. There’s a risk that people could end up with 
biased information.”

Labour MP Stella Creasy, who has campaigned on access to reproductive 
healthcare, urged the government to compel tech companies to remove potentially 
harmful listings. She said there was a difference between allowing free speech 
and “seeking to mislead vulnerable readers who need to be confident that what 
they are reading is medically sound and impartial”.


The Pregnancy Crisis Helpline said it stated on its website that it did not 
offer medical advice or “refer for abortion”.

“If a client asks for medical advice, we signpost them to their GP, 111 or A&E 
as appropriate,” said Toby Cosh, chair of the trustees. He added that while the 
helpline had been set up with support from Christian Concern, it had operated 
independently since 2018 and was a registered UK charity.

Kerry Smart, chief executive at Life, said: “Our person-centred online 
pregnancy listening service was inspired by the Samaritans and is non-coercive 
and non-judgmental.”

She added that people using Life’s “listening services” were told it did not 
refer for abortion or give information on abortion providers, and that the 
charity complied with ethical guidelines from the British Association for 
Counselling and Psychotherapy. “If clients wish to explore medical topics, we 
inform – not advise – using NHS information in skilled listening sessions,” she 
said. “We agree that attempts to mislead or give false information are wrong.”

Other adverts that appear on UK Google searches relating to pregnancy and 
abortion came from regulated abortion providers, including MSI Reproductive 
Choices and the British Pregnancy Advisory Service.

They appeared alongside adverts placed by anti-abortion charities in the UK and 
US that do not run counselling services and instead direct people to webpages 
about the ethics of abortion. The Observer understands that they do not always 
pay for their adverts because of a Google scheme that means organisations with 
charity status can be granted free advertising credits.

Google said: “We know that people come to Google looking for information they 
can trust, and we’ve invested heavily in providing a safe and transparent 
experience.

“When it comes to abortion-related ads, we require an added level of 
transparency so that people seeking abortion-related resources know what 
services an advertiser actually provides. Any organisation that wants to target 
queries related to getting an abortion must complete our certification process 
and clearly disclose whether they do or do not offer abortions.”

_______________________________________________
nexa mailing list
[email protected]
https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa

Reply via email to