No, not necessarily. I am 17 and I went in and I got started on the pill and they just gave me a prescription. They may check to see if your pregnant before they give you your prescription but no, I have never heard of them taking blood for that purpose unless to check for stds in your blood.
If you are taken your birth control daily! Well you can skip the sugar pills that is fine but if you take it daily you should be fine! and if its not the 1st month that you started your birth control if so you need to use an other form of birth control (CONDOMS)!
You need to consult a doctor and see why it's late. If you want to control your period birth control is the only way.
There are no known side effects between propranolol and the birth control pill. However, if you're taking this pill for blood pressure control or heart problems, contact your health care providers to be sure you don't need a change in birth control method.
Nothing. There is no need to take 3 at once because you won't be protected any more than if you took one. Birth control pills are hormones that when taken for a month will help protect you from pregnancy . They have to be taken everyday to work.
You need birth control so you do not get pregnant also to thin out your period or help with cramps
No,you will need to have a pelvic exam and a doctors prescription for birth control.
Yes, if you're pregnant, there is no need for birth control pills.
Depending on your medical history, options without estrogen include progestin only pills, Depo Provera, the IUD, and the contraceptive implant.
Yes, high blood pressure medicine is known to affect your period. It can make your period irregular. It also can make your period non existent. It is best to talk with your doctor about which high blood pressure medicine is right for your body and which medication will not affect your menstrual cycle.
If you wanna get pregnant, just stop using any form of birth control.
You may need to change brand of birth control. See your DR
Hormonal birth control can make the period so light that it seems to disappear altogether. If you have taken your birth control correctly in the previous month, there's no need for concern. If you've made any errors, take a pregnancy test to make sure that's not the cause of your missing period.