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Twitter and Google have claimed that adverts for a special issue of the medical journal Health Affairs focused on racism and health were prohibited. According to Verge, the latest issue of the peer-reviewed magazine includes studies on Black women’s sexual and reproductive health in the South, racial bias in electronic health records, health, and police confrontations, and inequities in the use of home health agencies.
The publication used targeted marketing on social media platforms such as Twitter and YouTube to attract new readers. It wanted to leverage the advertising to attract a new audience to the special issue, according to Patti Sweet, director of the digital strategy at Health Affairs.
However, the platforms were preventing it. The journal’s Google AdWords account was also suspended, according to the article.
While the newspaper claimed that the usage of the word “racist” was the reason for the rejections, the ads were reportedly prohibited by Twitter and Google owing to restrictions regarding advocacy and Covid-19.
This demonstrates how health research doesn’t always fit cleanly into the categories used by internet companies to indicate potentially dangerous content, making it difficult for them to distribute accurate information when specific keywords appear, according to the paper.
Google, according to the journal’s communications and public affairs manager Christa Muldoon, rejected the ads because the video the commercials were for referenced Covid-19.
Ads for Covid-19-related content must adhere to the company’s “sensitive events” policy, which prohibits ads “that potentially benefit from or exploit a sensitive incident.”
The ads were blocked under Twitter’s “cause-based” policy, which requires advertisers to obtain certification before running ads that “educate, raise awareness, and/or call for people to take action in connection with civic engagement, economic growth, environmental stewardship, or social equity causes.”
According to the article, Twitter’s cause-based ad policy was implemented in November 2019 as part of its control of political ads aimed at preventing bad actors from co-opting the site. It covers issues ranging from climate change to animal rights.
Health Affairs also claimed to have received a notice from Twitter for an ad that was removed due to its “inappropriate content” policy.
The ad, like those highlighted under the cause-based policy, described how the special issue was focused on racism and health.
In an email to The Verge, Twitter representative Laura Pacas noted that any ad would have been prohibited under the same cause-based policy.
Sweet, on the other hand, noted that Health Affairs does not fall under the type of advocacy that Twitter’s policy, for example, is designed to address.
“We’re not a political group,” Sweet explained, “but when a machine reads ‘health policy,’ it can assume politics.” “And they could think we’re promoting when we talk about race and health.”
in support of a cause for politicians, As a result, the brand is stuck in the middle of nowhere.”
This week, Health Affairs received its cause-based certification for Twitter, which it intends to resubmit.
Sweet added that the Google AdWords account had been turned back on after she filed appeals. She’s hoping that now, instead of focusing on the tech businesses, her staff can focus on the research.
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