NEET · Biology · Class 12Reproductive Health — NEET Biology MCQs
30 questions written by hand against the NCERT chapter. Every wrong option is explained, not just the right one.
30questions
10/14/6easy / medium / hard
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Sample questions from this chapter
A community has normal reproductive-organ function but widespread coercion, stigma and harmful sexual behaviour. Why is it not reproductively healthy?
- Reproductive health includes physical, emotional, behavioural and social well-being ✓
- Reproductive health is measured only by birth rate
- Normal organs guarantee healthy reproductive interactions
- Emotional well-being belongs solely to neural health
Answer: A. WHO's definition extends beyond absence of organ disease to total well-being in reproduction. A programme focused only on anatomy would miss preventable social and behavioural harm.
Why not B: Population size is one public-health outcome, not the complete WHO conception of well-being.
Why not C: Functional anatomy does not address consent, behaviour, relationships or social support.
Why not D: Emotional and social dimensions are explicitly part of reproductive health.
A non-medicated IUD and a copper IUD share which contraceptive action?
- Systemic inhibition of LH surge
- Thickening cervical mucus with progestogen
- Enhanced phagocytosis of sperm within uterus ✓
- Surgical interruption of gamete ducts
Answer: C. The uterine foreign-body response increases sperm phagocytosis across IUD types. Copper adds a direct ion-mediated impairment, while hormone devices add cervical and endometrial changes.
Why not A: That is characteristic of hormonal methods such as pills rather than the shared local IUD response.
Why not B: Hormone-releasing IUDs make cervix hostile, but a non-medicated loop lacks progestogen.
Why not D: Insertion leaves reproductive ducts anatomically intact.
A couple avoids intercourse only on day 14 but has unprotected coitus on days 11 and 16. Why can periodic abstinence still fail?
- The fertile interval spans several days because ovulation timing varies and gametes remain viable ✓
- Ovulation always occurs twice between days 10 and 17
- Sperm fertilise the endometrium before ovulation
- Menstruation normally begins on day 14
Answer: A. A fertile window is broader than the instant of ovulation because cycles vary and sperm and oocyte survive for finite periods. Natural-method failure often comes from treating a probability interval as one exact day.
Why not B: A typical cycle releases one secondary oocyte; uncertainty concerns timing and survival, not obligatory double ovulation.
Why not C: Fertilisation occurs in the oviduct between gametes, not in uterine tissue.
Why not D: Day 14 is near ovulation in an average cycle, not menstrual onset.
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Questions
How many NEET questions are there on Reproductive Health?
This chapter test has 30 questions — 10 easy, 14 medium and 6 hard — all written against the NCERT Class 12 chapter.
Is this NEET Biology chapter test free?
Yes. Every chapter test is free with no login. The only paid thing on the site is the full-length 90-question Biology mock and its all-India rank.
Do the questions explain the wrong options?
Yes — every distractor carries its own explanation naming the specific misconception that makes a student pick it. That is the part most question banks skip, and it is the part that changes your next attempt.