
The groups, which refuse to offer the full range of reproductive health care, hope to target more millennials with phone apps.

Obria, the under-the-radar anti-abortion group that provides misinformation via its "crisis pregnancy centers," is expanding.

A New Generation, a Florida-based anti-abortion "pregnancy resource center," just announced it would be affiliating with Obria. Doing so will allow the group to offer more medical services, as Obria is technically a medical clinic.

Of course, those medical services don't include things like birth control. Instead, it will be the usual fare places like this offer: ineffective abstinence counseling and medically unsound information about abortion.


A New Generation was particularly pleased to join with Obria because Obria aggressively markets to millennials, and A New Generation wants to "better minister" to them, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Obria has an app that lets people talk to an Obria provider, which A New Generation thinks millennials will find particularly appealing. In fact, the head of A New Generation described it as a "tele-medicine app, so clients will be able to reach us by using their phones and talk to a nurse face-to-face to get the information they need."

"Tele-medicine app" wildly overstates what Obria offers — and what A New Generation wants to offer. Obria doesn't offer birth control. Obria doesn't offer medication abortions. And Obria doesn't connect people with health care professionals who would give them a full range of reproductive health options.

Despite all the government money Obria is receiving, it still isn't offering actual medicine. Instead, the organization, which has received $1.7 million in Title X funds, will teach people about "restraint," California Healthline reports. It won't use any of the money to provide condoms to fight skyrocketing levels of STDs.

The head of A New Generation frames this partnership as being "able to meet the needs of women with their health care needs" but then clarified: "[W]hen they find themselves in a crisis situation, instead of turning to maybe an abortion provider, they would turn to us, because we’ve already built a relationship with them."

Obria isn't building relationships with anyone. It's using its ever-increasing — and now government-funded — platform to spread lies and to stop people from getting the reproductive health care they want and need. And now, it's got yet another clinic to help with that endeavor.