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South Australian anti-abortion activist Joanna Howe sparked an investigation after posting on social media an image she said showed a 16-week foetus taken inside Townsville’s hospital Butterfly Room.
Howe claimed the foetus, named “Samuel,” had been “born alive” after an abortion; she provided no evidence to support that claim.
Instagram blocked automatic display of the image and warned viewers it could be upsetting.
In follow-up videos Howe published detailed medical information from hospital records — including dates, times, birth weights, medications and other details — which hospital officials say could identify patients despite blurred names.
The Townsville Hospital and Health Service has opened inquiries into the alleged confidentiality breach, and Queensland’s Office of the Health Ombudsman said complaints would be managed under the Hospital and Health Boards Act 2011 and the Information Privacy Act 2009.
Medical representatives, including the president of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, condemned the publication as exploitative and harmful.
Howe, a migration law academic previously accused of spreading misinformation and banned from the South Australian parliament for confrontational tactics, has campaigned for tighter abortion laws and worked with politicians on repeal efforts.




















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