Yes, and I thank you for that question.
What I said before is that when you characterize everything as abusive and if you characterize all sex work as a form of exploitation, there's no distinction to be made between sex work and abuse of labour practices or trafficking. The legal definition of trafficking requires a fear for one's safety.
There's clearly some precision that has to be made to distinguish these two. As long as you criminalize sex work, you're going to have a much harder time identifying people who are suffering, experiencing exploitation or facing human trafficking. This conflation does not help sex workers and it doesn't help people who experience human trafficking.