Depending on what brand of pill you use, yes. Certain brands have white pills (sugar pills) that are meant to be taken during your period.
The yellow pill in the Trigestrel contraceptive pack is typically a placebo or inactive pill taken during the last week of the cycle. It does not contain hormones and is included to maintain a consistent daily pill-taking routine. This allows for a withdrawal bleed resembling a menstrual period while preventing ovulation and regulating the menstrual cycle during the active weeks when hormone-containing pills are taken.
The best way to change a menstrual cycle would be to go on the birth control pill. Then, if one takes the pill continuously, the cycle will occur only when the pill is not taken.
When you're taking the birth control pill, you don't have a menstrual period. Instead, you have withdrawal bleeding. Menstrual periods are vaginal bleeding the follows ovulation by 14 days. Withdrawal bleeding is vaginal bleeding brought on by sudden cessation of hormone ingestion. Whether you have unscheduled bleeding from missing a pill or scheduled bleeding during your placebo week, neither is called a menstrual period.
There is no way to shorten your menstrual period, certainly not naturally. For the record the pill doesn't shorten your menstrual period either, it works by stopping your menstrual cycles all together so you don't ovulate and thus don't menstruate - the bleeding women get on the pill isn't menstruation but a withdrawal bleed, it can be shorter but it is a totally different function.
Yes you are but intercourse during the menstrual period has a high risk of UTI or yeast infection if you don't use a condom.
If you're already on your period then the pill may reduce the flow of your period but will not stop it. However if you're not on your period you can stop your period by taking the pill but it isn't advisable as a permanent thing.
If starting the pill on any but the first day of menstrual bleeding, you should use a backup method for the first seven days of pill use. The pill should be about 99.7% - 99.9% effective if taken daily.
In Trigestrel, a combined oral contraceptive pill, the red pill typically contains a placebo or sugar pill. These pills are taken during the last week of the cycle to allow for a withdrawal bleed, mimicking a natural menstrual cycle. The active pills contain hormones that prevent ovulation and regulate menstrual cycles, while the red pills maintain adherence to the daily pill-taking routine.
There is no such pill. Your period is part of your menstrual cycle, you cannot speed-up your cycle or skip phases of your cycle to make your period start earlier than it is due.
No. "Bleeding" (a menstrual period), is the sign of a non-pregnancy.
Any combination birth control pill will give you more regular vaginal bleeding. None of them will cause a lasting change in your menstrual period. When you stop taking them, you will return to your previous menstrual pattern.
Very possibly you'll be having a baby in 9 months. Many women get pregnant immediately following stopping the pill. Some even continue to take the pill not realizing they are pregnant. Studies have shown that these pregnancies are as healthy as woman who have never taken BCP and end in miscarriage at the same rate as women who have never taken the BCP.