NHS gynecologist, Dr Anita Mitra, on to talk about vaginas and vulvas. Throughout the interview, she talked of "people with vaginas" and "people with vulvas"
Urgh. Just such dehumanizing and awful language. Can we also be clear that the word gyneacology itself refers to females. It wouldn't surprise me if eventually the TRAs want try to change that, too...
The other point I just thought about is that using "people with a vagina" when talking specifically about the female reproductive system can be construed as still being trans-exclusive, in a way. "Neovaginas" and "neovulvas," aka surgical alterations of male genitalia to look like female genitalia, will NOT have any of the same medical considerations as actual vaginas and vulvas. If a natal male with a neovagina has a problem with the neovagina, they need to go back to the gender clinic/surgeon who operated on them. It's absolutely nothing to do with gyneacology. No matter how a male identifies or whether they've had a genital operation, they will not have a female reproductive system.
So in trying to engage with these idiotic linguistic contortions to be "inclusive," you risk: confusing your audience, insulting women/girls, systematically excluding any women who aren't familiar with specific terminology for female genitalia, and forgetting to explain that surgically altered male genitalia is never going to be the same as female genitalia, so gyneacological health advice does not apply to some (male) "people with a (neo)vagina"....
We desperately need to retain language that accurately and specifically describes the reality of sex in healthcare. Anything else is unnecessary obfuscation, really cumbersome, and potentially dangerous.