yeah, you actually can. but i don't know if it will be regular afterwards. i think it might only last a while (then you'd have to take them again). see your doctor for advice on whether or not to do this.
At the end of your pill pack most likely. If you don't get it, you may need a different type of pill. Call your doctor and talk to them to find out what you need to do if you don't get a period and the end of the pill pack.
You can either be a first day starter and start the pill on the first day of your period or you can be a Sunday starter and start the first Sunday after your period starts regardless of whether you're bleeding or not. If you're a Sunday starter, you need to use a backup method for the next seven days, but if you're a first day starter, the Birth Control is effective immediately. You can either be a first day starter and start the pill on the first day of your period or you can be a Sunday starter and start the first Sunday after your period starts regardless of whether you're bleeding or not. If you're a Sunday starter, you need to use a backup method for the next seven days, but if you're a first day starter, the birth control is effective immediately.
Birth control affects people differently. Your body does not get used to the pill right away, so you could still have you period that week. It can take a few months for your body to fully get used to birth control.
yes. You will not get your period until you get to your "inactive pills". They are sometimes a different color than the rest of your pills in the pack. For example, if the pills are mostly pink, then the ones at the end of the month are white, when they turn white you are expected to get your period. However, if before you began taking bc you had unprotected sex and expect that you could be pregnant, you should stop taking the pill because it could cause birth defects of a miscarrage. Be sure to talk to your doctor and read the instructions that come with your pills!
You should get your period about 3 weeks after you start taking the pill. It may not necessarilly be exactly 3 weeks. This would be normal.
Normally you should start the day or day after you take the first placebo pill.
A sugar pill is what women take to start their period. It allows the period to start.
The pill lightens bleeding. Sometimes it's so light you don't see it at all. If you took the pill correctly, you don't need a pregnancy test. But it's not reasonble to expect your period to start on the exact "due date," even when you're on the pill.
Your period will start within 7 days
Your are suppose to start the birth control pill the Sunday after your period. If you haven't had a period its best to take a pregnancy test to make sure your not pregnant. If you test is negative then you can go to your gyne doctor and they can give you a pill to start your period.
You start taking the pill at the end of your period, and then, yes you will not have a period again until the break in the pill.
You shouldn't start taking the pill until you have started or have just ended you period. You should speak to your doctor about when you should start taking the pill if it has been prescribed to you for cycle regulation because you will need to make sure that the reason you have not had a period is not due to pregnancy.
You start your new pack of pills when you finish your old pack. Lets say you had you last pill on a Wednesday, you then start your new pill on Thursday. If its your first pack you have ever taken then you either start your first pill on the day you start your period or on the Sunday during your period. At first you period will not go with the pill correctly; it my take a month or two for your period to adjust.
No, as it will stop your period and you will have terrible pains, you can only start taking them when your off, and you have to do that till you stop taking the pill or you won't have your periods.
If you start the pill on the first day of your period, you have immediate protection against pregnancy.
If your period starts on sunday, you can start the pill that day.
You can either start taking the pill on the first day of your period, which is called day one start, or on the first Sunday after your period, which is called a Sunday start.
The length of the first period after the pill is unpredictable. While you're on the pill, the hormones decrease the amount of menstrual flow. You can expect longer and heavier periods, returning to your previous pattern, after you stop the pill.