Online information about so-called designer vaginas is often "poor and inaccurate", researchers have said.
Websites of companies that provide female genital cosmetic surgery
(FGCS) make "unsubstantiated claims" about the benefits of the
procedures.
They also use confusing terminology and do not highlight surgical risks, according to the research published in BMJ Open.

300 teenage girls have had genital cosmetic surgery on the NHS
Researchers from University College Hospital, London, examined the data women can access if they are considering surgery.They performed a snapshot analysis on websites of 10 private providers that offer FGCS procedures.They concluded: "The terminology used to describe the operations performed is confusing."Little information is given on short-term or long-term surgical
risks either from individual clinics and their surgeons or from the
medical literature."Unsubstantiated claims of physical, psychological and sexual benefits were present on every website."The researchers added that it was "disturbing" that there is not a lower age limit for the surgery."The absence of a lower age limit for any of the FGCS procedures is most disturbing of all," the authors wrote."In the past six years, 343 labiaplasties were performed in the UK
NHS on girls aged 14 or under. The indications for surgery in this group
of children are unknown, but labial anomalies requiring surgical
interventions are extremely rare."In a recent observational study of referral patterns, girls as young
as nine years with normal labia had presented for labiaplasty.
Websites of companies that provide female genital cosmetic surgery (FGCS) make "unsubstantiated claims" about the benefits of the procedures.
They also use confusing terminology and do not highlight surgical risks, according to the research published in BMJ Open.
















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