She wrote this paper about the attitudes of medical professionals in maternity care towards women who don't identify as woman, it's an interesting read but as one might expect it's very biased towards trans ideological beliefs: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/08912432221138086
Some gender-critical highlights:
Others expressed concerns about disempowerment: “I am actually more concerned about the way that some transgender people and their supporters are trying to disempower cis women and make them invisible by using terms like ‘pregnant people,’ so I think this is very complex” (midwife). Evident within these responses was a tension between traditionally feminist constructions of “maternity services” being “woman centered” and intersectional feminist concerns for making health services more inclusive of gender-diverse childbearing people.
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Others expressed concern about the removal of gendered language (e.g., “woman”) within services used by an overwhelming majority of cisgender women. For example, one respondent said they would “rail against ‘birthing parent’ being used as standard” (consultant midwife). Another stated, “[I] would not like to see the term ‘woman’ stopped from being used in maternity services and replaced with person . . . as both a woman and midwife” (senior midwife).
Whereas many respondents supported the idea of being inclusive of childbearing trans and nonbinary people, a minority expressed reservations based on the notion that inclusion might come at the expense of affirming cisgender women’s own identity: “Female voices are being excluded while decisions are being made that materially affect all female people” (medical and renal registrar).
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Some struggled to understand why a trans man would want to experience what they saw as a “female act”:
• Why [a trans person] might engage in a very female act by carrying a pregnancy if it was a female who was identifying as a male. (Lecturer)
• How their trans status is managed while pregnant—I can’t figure out “living as a man” while pregnant/breastfeeding. (Physiotherapist)
This further highlights a cisgenderist understanding of childbearing, where it is presumed that only cisgender women will be or want to be pregnant, or that a desire to be pregnant must undermine a trans man’s sense of himself as a man.