Actually yes, the pill can't help you if you take it after you have had sex. Although since your on your period it lowers the chance of you being pregnate.
I believe it may take 2-5 days in order to allow the pregnancy hormones to build up to a level where they can be detected by a home pregnancy test. Having said that, I took a pregnancy test within hours of having an implantation bleed with my son and it appeared positive within seconds!
It's really no big deal. Within your first yer of periods it will spread out more. If not ask your mom or doctor.
During a pregnancy the head circumference, abdominal circumference, Fumur and Amniotic Fluid index are monitored and measured at scans to check they are growing within the normal range e.g 10th, 50th and 90th centiles. Anything outside of the 10th and 90th range is considered not to be 'normal' and could be a sign of a problem. If the head circumference is measured and found out of this range e.g below the normal range then it could be a sign of FAS, Microcephaly or another type of mental disorder. However, any measurements within this range is considered to be normal. The question is difficult to answer because it depends on what "small" actually means, like I say, if it is below the 10th centile range then it is too small and there COULD be a problem but if it has been measured to be within the normal range then the baby could just have a petite head with no mental issues.
95% is within 2 standard deviations of the mean.
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No. rhythm methods and "safe" periods are very unreliable. one out of five women relying on that gets pregnant within one year.
No. Missing periods are an indication of pregnancy, not having too many.
Of 100 couples who stopped the birth control pill, 85 will experience a pregnancy within one year if they don't start using another method of pregnancy prevention.
A pregnancy test WILL NOT tell you if you are pregnant immediately after having intercourse unless you've had intercourse within the last nine months (on another occasion) and you are already pregnant.
The same as every other woman who is not using birth control - about 30%.
Are we referring to in vivo fertilization; literally injecting donor sperm in an effort to conceive? Or are we referring to risks associated with unprotected sex where the male partner ejaculated in the female partners vagina? If this question is about the risks of repeated unprotected sex, the answer is, it can easily result in pregnancy. Looking at statistics that change based on dates in the a woman's fertility cycle will give you an average risk set. The average risk conglomerating all dates and conditions within a woman's cycle, if both partners are completely fertile, is a 2.5% chance of pregnancy per instance of unprotected sex. So, on average, there is a 7.5% to 10% chance of pregnancy. But pregnancy doesn't work by averages. In some conditions, it would be nearly impossible to conceive. In others it would be overwhelmingly likely that she would conceive. If she had ovulated within 24 hours of the intercourse, for example, there is an 80% chance of pregnancy from unprotected an sexual intercourse.
It just prevents it, an IUD is a form of birth control, not abortion. And the morning after pill or Plan-B must be taken within 72 hours of the unprotected sex or birth control failure to ensure that pregnancy can be prevented.
It is possible; you should be able to notice signs within a week to two weeks of pregnancy although initial fertilization and implantation may take about a week after intercourse. So you should wait at least two weeks after sex to test for pregnancy.
According to the American Pregnancy Association, yes, pregnancy does increase the risk of cerebral palsy, but not pregnancy alone. Factors during pregnancy play a large role. Issues such as infections during pregnancy, blood diseases, ,acterial meningitis, and lack of oxygen to the fetus can increase chances. Pregnancy will not increase the chance of palsy within the mother.
No. Two normal heavy periods and no symptoms of pregnancy sound like your definitely not pregnant.
No. It will not. If you need emergency protection against pregnancy you need emergency contraceptives within 48 hours of the unprotected sex. This is also known as "The Morning After Pill" But doubling or tripling up will not protect you.
No. Birth control pills are based on progesterone being in your system long-term. Chances are, you have already ovulated by skipping those seven pills. The morning after pill (PlanB) can prevent pregnancy as long as it's taken within 120 hours after unprotected sex. Plan B is the same as taking multiple regular birth control pills.