If you miss three weeks of Birth Control pills, you should start the pill again as soon as possible. Use a back up method for the first seven days of that new cycle. Consider using the morning after pill if you had sex in the last five days.
If you miss the birth control patch for three days, put on a patch as soon as you remember. Use a backup method of birth control until you've used the patch correctly for seven days. Consider using emergency contraception if you had sex during those three days.
You will have a withdrawal bleed, and it will certainly affect your body if you get pregnant.
No. Just take 2 the next day. Make sure you keep taking them, though for them to work. Take them the same time every day to make a habit of it.
Yes!
No. If you are taking birth control pills neither of those will effect the pill. I took all three together for years and never had my pills fail. The only drug that effects the effectiveness of your pill is an antibiotic .It does lessen the pill.
Missing pills to often can cause this proplem.
look. you can get pregnanton birth control. if your spottin and your not on your period, then go see your gynecologist or family doc n let them know. it's probably nothing
The birth control patch has a failure rate of less than 1% when it is used correctly and consistently. The patch may not protect you from pregnancy if you are taking antibiotics or medications for fungal infections or seizures.
The birth control shot is a very effective form of birth control. The hormone progesterone in the birth control shot works by preventing ovulation. The shot is given in the arm or the buttocks every three months. There is a chance of pregnancy if you wait over three months for your next shot.
A child who takes three birth control pills may have some nausea, but no other short-term or long-term ill effects.
Religion, Morals, and health
no
yes you can just take the birth control, when you stop your period should start three to four days after.
yes absolutely. you should be taking the birth control for at least a week or two for it to be fully effective.
Birth control pills, Mirena (IUD), NuvaRing, DepoProvera, Implanon and the patch are all hormonal methods of birth control sold in the US. There is another injection available in some other countries, as well.