You should take your Birth Control pills on schedule regardless of bleeding. If it's time to start your next pack, you should do so in order to have the greatest effectiveness.
you will get your period when you start taking your "period" placebo pills in your pack
some birth control pills give you a shorter period.
Ordinarily birth control pills do not "put off" or eliminate the menstrual period. Some women using depo provera (injections) do not have their menstrual periods while on that medication.
Your period usually comes during the placebo pills week(sugar pills).
If you take birth control, simply skip the week of sugar pills and you won't get your period. If you're not, ask your doctor about birth control methods - there are some pills out there designed to stop your period for months at a time.
Birth control pills should stop your menstrual bleeding. I would suggest you stop the pills and talk to your doctor
The birthcontrol pills will introduce more estrogen into your system that will help regulate your period. This is a very common thing for doctors to do to help regulate the period.
Birth control pills will help regulate the menstrual cycle.
Because birth control pills lighten the amount of menstrual flow, you will likely have longer and heavier flow after you stop. You are likely to return to your previous menstrual pattern. The amount and length of bleeding is unpredictable as it varies from woman to woman.
The average menstrual cycle length is 28 days - but everyone is different. As a note while on birth control pills you don't have a menstrual cycle, the pill works by suppressing your menstrual cycles so you no longer ovulate.
Birth control has many benefits. The two big ones are to Prevent pregnancy and to control your menstrual cycle.
A normal menstrual cycle - especially if you are on birth control pills.