Birth control: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
(trying to turn this into a disambiguation type of page)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{subpages}}
{{subpages}}


<font size="2" color="660000">''This article is a general discussion of birth control in human society. For an article about the medical means of contraception see [[Contraception (medical methods)]], for surgical means of contraception see [[Sterilization (surgical)]] and for natural methods see [[Natural Family Planning]] or [[Christian views on contraception]]. For spaying and neutering in animals see [[Desexing operations]] .''</font>
'''Birth control''' refers to ways of limiting or avoiding pregnancy. It has multiple related sub-topics.


{{rpl|Contraception (medical methods)}}
{{rpl|Contraception (medical methods)}}
Line 8: Line 8:
{{rpl|Natural family planning}}
{{rpl|Natural family planning}}
{{rpl|Christian views on contraception}}
{{rpl|Christian views on contraception}}
<font size="2" color="660000">''This article is a general discussion of birth control in human society. For an article about the medical means of contraception see [[Contraception (medical methods)]], for surgical means of contraception see [[Sterilization (surgical)]] and for natural methods see [[Natural Family Planning]] or [[Christian views on contraception]]. For spaying and neutering in animals see [[Desexing operations]] .''</font>
<font size="2" color="333333">''This article is about the alternative medical means of contraception, for a general discussion of birth control in human society, see [[contraception]]; for surgical means of contraception, see [[sterilization (surgical)]]; and for methods using medications and medical devices, see [[contraception (medical methods)]].</font>

Revision as of 09:39, 22 January 2023

Birth control [r]: forms of pregnancy prevention that include barrier contraceptives (condoms, cervical caps, etc.), birth control pills or patches (i.e, hormonal contraceptives), and IUD's (intrauterine devices) [e]

This article contains just a definition and optionally other subpages (such as a list of related articles), but no metadata. Create the metadata page if you want to expand this into a full article.

Birth control refers to ways of limiting or avoiding pregnancy. It has multiple related sub-topics.

  • Developing Article Contraception (medical methods): forms of pregnancy prevention that include barrier contraceptives (condoms, cervical caps, etc.), birth control pills or patches (i.e, hormonal contraceptives), and IUD's (intrauterine devices) [e]
  • Sterilization (surgical): Add brief definition or description
  • Stub Desexing operation: the spaying and neutering of animals by surgery, leaving a male or female animal unable to reproduce and with lowered sex hormone levels [e]
  • Stub Natural family planning: the least reliable form of birth control, based on abstinence during the days of the month when the female is ovulating, whereby one in five women will likely become pregnant if sexually active and using only this method [e]
  • Developing Article Christian views on contraception: there is wide variation, with the Catholic Church completely rejecting it, and Protestant groups running the gamut between complete disapproval and complete acceptance, and Quakers having no collective opinion at all [e]

This article is a general discussion of birth control in human society. For an article about the medical means of contraception see Contraception (medical methods), for surgical means of contraception see Sterilization (surgical) and for natural methods see Natural Family Planning or Christian views on contraception. For spaying and neutering in animals see Desexing operations .

This article is about the alternative medical means of contraception, for a general discussion of birth control in human society, see contraception; for surgical means of contraception, see sterilization (surgical); and for methods using medications and medical devices, see contraception (medical methods).