You really need to read the instructions that come with your particular pills, but as far as I am aware you need to start taking themn at the beginning of your cycle or you are not protected for the first month.
Your physician will need to be contacted, along with a guardian to determine if this is the right choice for you. It will most certainly be a "no" answer for both, though. Certain kinds of birth control can be used to treat acne, but isn't usually recommended for ladies that have not yet had a menstrual cycle, as birth control most often causes medical issues, such as blood clots.. Asking a physician & guardian at the same time will help determine what your best options are.
Yes there are certain birth controls you can take like Depo Provera. But be careful I was on Depo for about 2 years and it messed up my body. When I finally got off it I had a period for 3 months straight. I have other friends who were on it that gained a lot of weight. There are other birth controls that can make you have a period only three times a year like seasonique.
Yes, you can start the pill on any day of the month. Just use a back up method of Birth Control, like condoms or abstinence from vaginal sex, until you've taking seven pills in a row correctly.
birth control is very risky to start, ever. It messing you up completely. you have a cycle for a reason.
Yes you can if you want
YES
yes
Starting the pill before your period may delay your period, but you may also have breakthrough bleeding during the first three cycles. If starting the pill before your period, use a back up Birth Control method for the first seven days.
Yes, if you start the birth control pill for the first time before your period, your period will come later. It usually comes during the last week of the cycle.
Starting the pill before your period may delay your period, but you may also have breakthrough bleeding during the first three cycles. If starting the pill before your period, use a back up birth control method for the first seven days.
Yes; if you start birth control on the first day of your period, you'll have immediate protection.
You can start the pill at any time during your cycle. If you start a week before your period, use a back up method of birth control for the first seven days of the pack.
A woman can take birth control pills before she has been pregnant once. Sometimes a woman may use birth control pills before a first period, although that is exceedingly rare.
Right on the first day. It will take a month before the pills will be effective.
Your first period after stopping birth control pills will normally arrive in 4-6 weeks. If your periods were irregular before you went on the pill, they're likely to return quickly to their previous irregular pattern.
Yes you can start birth control while on your period. Usually your doctor will tell you to start on a Sunday so it's easier to remember when you first started your pack.If you get your period on the Sunday you start you still start on birth control.
There is no way to know when you will start your period when you first start taking Triphasal birth control. You just have to wait and see how your body reacts.
Yes, you should always continue to take your birth control unless your physician tells you to stop. Stopping your birth control and having unprotected sex will make you become pregnant. If you are experiencing any bleeding before the expected date or time of your period, you are most likely experiencing spotting or breakthrough bleeding. This is bleeding that is not considered a period, it is however a side effect from birth control that can last up to 3 months when you first begin birth control.
It's very unlikely that you'd have a normal period the first month off birth control (I'm assuming by 'birth control' what you actually mean is the combination pill - please don't use these terms interchangeably, there are many forms of birth control!). Your first 'period' will be your withdrawal bleed as normal, but after that it may take a few months to get a real period again. It can also take up to 12 months for your cycles to regulate again once you stop using hormonal birth control.