Probably.
Yes, stopping Depo Prover will affect your period. Some women may have spotting, and others may not get a regular period for up to 18 months. The average return to fertility is 11 months after stopping Depo Provera.
After using emergency contraception, your period may come a week earlier, a week later, or right on time.
no
I believe the question here is 'can you take oral contraception to get your period?' - the simple answer is no, you cannot. Menstruation is a result of your menstrual cycle, if you ovulate but don't conceive the uterine lining will shed and ready itself for your next cycle - oral contraception suppresses your menstrual cycle to stop ovulation so you can't get pregnant, and thus you don't menstruate. The bleeding women experience on oral contraception is a withdrawal bleed not menstruation, and taking oral contraception won't force a period.
You can use anything you like - pads, tampons, cup -- with your period after stopping depo provera.
some women usually get their period a month to a couple months after stopping the mini pill. 1-3 months!!
After stopping the pill, your next period will come in 4-6 weeks, and will soon return to its previous pattern, as it was before you were on the pill.
That's normal. Just as stopping the active pills (typically after three weeks) leads to period-like withdrawal bleeding, stopping your birth control pills at any time in the cycle may lead to period-like withdrawal bleeding.
Yes. Counting days is very unreliable as a means of contraception.
Periods usually start within 3-7 days after stopping progyluton.
You may get pregnant at any time after stopping the contraceptive implant. If you had a period, your body is likely ovulating at this point.
It varies, about 28 days.