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Those looking for abortion providers using Google Maps are still being led to anti-choice pregnancy centers, while searches for an abortion provider using Yelp turn up consistently accurate results.

Yelp made a concerted effort last summer to ensure the business review site was delivering accurate results when people turn to its platform to find abortion care. Google, meanwhile, struggles to explain why it directs those seeking abortion services to clinics that offer misinformation about abortion and don’t offer the service.

Last year, news outlets reported that Google Maps searches for “abortion providers” or “where can I get an abortion near me?” often turned up results for crisis pregnancy centers, or CPCs, known to intentionally mislead those seeking abortion care and influence their reproductive health decisions using shady tactics. That includes promoting misinformation about abortion to make it sound like a risky procedure—it isn’t—and setting up shop next to actual abortion providers in hopes that pregnant people will mistakenly walk through their doors instead.

How did Yelp ensure abortion care seekers would not be offered search results from those looking to dissuade people from seeking the service? Yelp said it manually reviewed over 2,000 businesses and recategorized clinics that don’t provide abortions as “ Crisis Pregnancy Centers ” or “Faith-Based Crisis Pregnancy Centers.” That included gathering information from business websites and social media pages, looking at reviews from customers, and examining information that the businesses contribute to Yelp.

“While it’s a painstaking, manual process to ensure accurate categorization at scale, it’s a challenge we prioritize and take seriously,” Yelp spokesperson Kathleen Liu told Rewire.News.

In contrast to Google, a Yelp search for an abortion provider in an area where there are none turns up no results.

Last Week Tonight that spotlighted how anti-choice clinics deceive people who are seeking abortion care and sometimes put their health at risk. Yelp began weeding out deceptive results after CEO Jeremy Stoppelman watched an episode ofthat spotlighted how anti-choice clinics deceive people who are seeking abortion care and sometimes put their health at risk.

“After learning about the increasing threat to consumers with this type of misinformation, it inspired Jeremy to take a look at how he can further improve the platform,” Liu said.