Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Instagram and Facebook Blocked and Hid Abortion Pill Providers’ Posts
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 2 days ago on
January 24, 2025

Mark Zuckerberg, the Meta chief executive, attend the inauguration of President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington, Jan. 20, 2025. Instagram and Facebook has recently blurred, blocked or removed posts from two abortion pill providers. Instagram also suspended the accounts of several abortion pill providers and hid the providers from appearing in search and recommendations. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Instagram and Facebook have recently blurred, blocked or removed posts from two abortion pill providers. Instagram also suspended the accounts of several abortion pill providers and hid the providers from appearing in search and recommendations.

The actions ramped up in the past two weeks, and were especially noticeable in the past two days, abortion pill providers said. Content from their accounts — or in some cases, their entire accounts — were no longer visible on Instagram.

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, confirmed the account suspensions and the blurring of posts. The company restored some of the accounts and posts Thursday, after The New York Times asked about the actions.

Meta has been under scrutiny since its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, announced sweeping changes to the company’s speech policies this month. Zuckerberg vowed to loosen restrictions on online speech, causing concerns among misinformation researchers and others that the shifts could cause a spike in hate speech and have other harmful effects.

Timing of Incidents Raises Questions

Meta said the moderation of abortion-focused accounts was not related to the change in speech policies. But the timing of the incidents raised questions about whether the company was really loosening speech restrictions, and was another example of its challenges in content enforcement.

A Meta spokesperson attributed some of the recent incidents involving abortion pill-related posts and accounts to rules that prohibit the sale of pharmaceutical drugs on its platforms without proper certification. He did not say why the rules were being enforced now. The company also described some of the incidents as “over-enforcement.”

Meta, which has previously suppressed posts from abortion providers, has said it was making changes to its speech policies partly to reduce the number of posts that were erroneously taken down.

“We’ve been quite clear in recent weeks that we want to allow more speech and reduce enforcement mistakes,” Meta said in a statement.

Lisa Femia, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said that since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, “there’s been a massive uptick in social media platforms removing content related to reproductive health care and specifically abortion pills. This is an ongoing, increasing problem and a real threat to people receiving vital information and guidance about health care online.”

Aid Access, one of the largest abortion pill providers in the United States, said some posts were removed on its Facebook account and blurred out on its Instagram account since November, with more posts blurred in recent days. The abortion pill service said it has been blocked from accessing its Facebook account since November, and its Instagram account was suspended last week, although it has since been restored.

Instagram Accounts Related to Abortion Were Suspended

The Instagram accounts of other abortion pill providers, including Women Help Women and Just the Pill, were also suspended in recent days. The providers said the reason that Meta gave them for the suspensions was that their accounts did not “follow our Community Standards on guns, drugs and other restricted goods.” Both accounts were restored Thursday.

The Instagram account of Hey Jane, another abortion pill provider, was recently invisible in Instagram search, said Rebecca Davis, who leads marketing at Hey Jane. Something similar happened in 2023 until Meta reversed it, she said.

“We know firsthand that this suppression actively prevents Hey Jane from reaching people who are seeking out timely health care information,” Davis said. “Given Meta’s recent promises around free speech, we’re incredibly disappointed to see how the platform is restricting our free speech.”

The Food and Drug Administration permits telehealth providers to prescribe online and deliver by mail the prescription drugs that cause an abortion: mifepristone and misoprostol. Twelve states have banned abortion, and more have placed gestational limits or restrictions on mail-order pills. But providers in states where abortion is legal have been mailing pills to states with bans under shield laws meant to protect them.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Claire Cain Miller, Kate Conger and Mike Isaac/Kenny Holston
c. 2025 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Red No. 3 Ban: From Candy to Medicine, What’s Changing and When

DON'T MISS

Wall Street Banks Prepare to Offload Billions in Musk’s X Debt

DON'T MISS

State Department Freezes New Funding for Nearly All US Aid Programs Worldwide

DON'T MISS

As Schools in LA Reopen, Parents Worry About Harmful Ash From Wildfires

DON'T MISS

California Proves Renewable Energy’s Reliability in Groundbreaking Study

DON'T MISS

Trump Uses Mass Firing to Remove Independent Inspectors General at a Series of Agencies

DON'T MISS

Hamas Frees 4 Female Israeli Soldiers in Exchange for 200 Palestinian Prisoners as Ceasefire Holds

DON'T MISS

Senate Confirms Noem as Trump’s Homeland Security Secretary

DON'T MISS

Hegseth Is Quickly Sworn In as Defense Secretary After Dramatic Senate Vote

DON'T MISS

Ready to Invest in Love? Cash the Puppy Seeks Forever Home

UP NEXT

Wall Street Banks Prepare to Offload Billions in Musk’s X Debt

UP NEXT

State Department Freezes New Funding for Nearly All US Aid Programs Worldwide

UP NEXT

California Proves Renewable Energy’s Reliability in Groundbreaking Study

UP NEXT

Trump Uses Mass Firing to Remove Independent Inspectors General at a Series of Agencies

UP NEXT

Hamas Frees 4 Female Israeli Soldiers in Exchange for 200 Palestinian Prisoners as Ceasefire Holds

UP NEXT

Senate Confirms Noem as Trump’s Homeland Security Secretary

UP NEXT

Hegseth Is Quickly Sworn In as Defense Secretary After Dramatic Senate Vote

UP NEXT

Ready to Invest in Love? Cash the Puppy Seeks Forever Home

UP NEXT

Trump’s Plan to Crush the Academic Left

UP NEXT

Secret Service Agents Seeking Student Over Trump Video Blocked From School

As Schools in LA Reopen, Parents Worry About Harmful Ash From Wildfires

11 hours ago

California Proves Renewable Energy’s Reliability in Groundbreaking Study

11 hours ago

Trump Uses Mass Firing to Remove Independent Inspectors General at a Series of Agencies

12 hours ago

Hamas Frees 4 Female Israeli Soldiers in Exchange for 200 Palestinian Prisoners as Ceasefire Holds

12 hours ago

Senate Confirms Noem as Trump’s Homeland Security Secretary

13 hours ago

Hegseth Is Quickly Sworn In as Defense Secretary After Dramatic Senate Vote

13 hours ago

Ready to Invest in Love? Cash the Puppy Seeks Forever Home

14 hours ago

Trump’s Plan to Crush the Academic Left

15 hours ago

Secret Service Agents Seeking Student Over Trump Video Blocked From School

16 hours ago

Drone Delivery is Here: Zipline CEO Shares the Future of Product Transport

16 hours ago

Red No. 3 Ban: From Candy to Medicine, What’s Changing and When

Following last week’s FDA announcement banning the synthetic food dye FD&C Red No. 3, Salon has detailed which products will be af...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

Red No. 3 Ban: From Candy to Medicine, What’s Changing and When

10 hours ago

Wall Street Banks Prepare to Offload Billions in Musk’s X Debt

11 hours ago

State Department Freezes New Funding for Nearly All US Aid Programs Worldwide

11 hours ago

As Schools in LA Reopen, Parents Worry About Harmful Ash From Wildfires

11 hours ago

California Proves Renewable Energy’s Reliability in Groundbreaking Study

12 hours ago

Trump Uses Mass Firing to Remove Independent Inspectors General at a Series of Agencies

12 hours ago

Hamas Frees 4 Female Israeli Soldiers in Exchange for 200 Palestinian Prisoners as Ceasefire Holds

13 hours ago

Senate Confirms Noem as Trump’s Homeland Security Secretary

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend