Talk:Human Physiology/The female reproductive system

Images
Your chapter doesnt have many images, so i found a few extra for you.















There are plenty of other images on the server, but many of them are photographic depictions of nude women, so they may not be appropriate. Ask your professor first. --Whiteknight (talk) (projects) 23:40, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

how can we download these file? or we cann't?

G Spot
You show the G-Spot in the urethra, not the vagina. fatmarauder@gmail.com 108.216.66.77 (discuss) 21:00, 3 December 2012 (UTC)

Types of Birth Control, misleading language, bias
In several of the birth control methods listed in the table it seems someone appended the following statement "but can also operate by killing a fertilized egg by preventing its implantation" which in at least one case is incorrect and in all cases is dubious in wording if not in how factual it is.

This strikes me as almost certainly biased, charged rhetoric used in political NOT scientific debate.

In the case of the morning after pill (plan B) the following npr article and the links within it clearly show evidence that it does no such thing. http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/02/22/172595689/morning-after-pills-dont-cause-abortion-studies-say

In the other cases none of the methods have been definitively of casually established to operate in such a manner.

As such I believe the language should be removed from the listing for plan B and made much more neutral in all other instances to make it clear that although there is debate about whether they prevent implantation it has neither been established nor ruled out.

In particular I take issue with the term "killing", it is far from neutral and in my opinion betrays the editor's bias.

The edit in question which added this text is: [https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Human_Physiology/The_female_reproductive_system&diff=2224136&oldid=2204048 01:54, 30 November 2011‎ MichaelJoseph (discuss | contribs)‎ m. . (68,893 bytes) (+455)‎. . (→‎Types of Birth Control: added effects of some birth control methods on fertilized eggs in a few places)] [checked by Xania]. That edit served ONLY to append those lines.

I have created an account and taken the action of reverting these changes.

If someone would like to rewrite/add-to the article/section to reflect the valid debate and lack of understanding/consensus on mechanism for the methods for which it is still unclear they are encouraged to do so in a fair and npov manner.

Furthermore I would encourage anyone considering updating the text to include something on this controversial/debatable mechanism of action to post here regarding any changes or planned changes explaining rationale, evidence, reasoning, etc. Edit wars are undesirable, thank you. --Ascientificmind (discuss • contribs) 23:46, 23 April 2014 (UTC)

Edit: Seems I can't edit the page because I'm a newly registered user, I'll try to remember to come back and fix this but as I have no idea how long the period is during which I'll be considered a "new user" I can't be sure I will soon. As such if anyone else sees this and the language is still there I would appreciate it being reverted. --Ascientificmind (discuss • contribs) 00:10, 24 April 2014 (UTC)

New to Wikibooks, but old to Wikipedia
I'm not certain what kind of permissions it takes to be allowed to edit this book, but I've been researching topics related to the female reproductive system and have a lot to contribute. I adhere to the reliable source guidelines in the Project:Medicine and so all my info is documented and up-to-date.  Bfpage &#124;leave a message 01:42, 29 April 2015 (UTC)