You can get breakthrough bleeding when you are on the pill increasing the risk of conception. this can be the result of the wrong dosage or strength in the pill. The best thing to do is consult your physician.
The bleeding is the withdrawal bleed and is normal. This occurs when you stop taking birth control for over a few days. You can become pregnant.
Yes, because if you don't you will keep bleeding
no
Hello. No bleeding after using birth control isn't harmful hun. If you have stopped birth control and are bleeding, this is perfectly normal and is happening because your experiencing break through bleeding from the withdrawal of the pill. If you are bleeding while on birth control and have missed some pills - then this is why your bleeding. Dont miss any pills and you wont bleed. If you are bleeding while on birth control and are taking the pills correctly and haven't missed any, then this is most likely due to the doseage of the pill not being high enough. See your doctor for a change of pill or increase in doseage. Take care!
When you stop taking birth control you can now become pregnant. If you had an irregular period before birth control pills, your period will go back to irregular periods. Heavier and longer periods may occur as well. You may also experience withdrawal bleeding which your body's way of ridding the birth control hormones.
Hi, Causes of vagina discharge while taking birth control are: * Implantation bleeding. * Withdrawal bleed from missing one or more pills. * Urinary tract infection. * Pregnancy.
Yes, when you stop birth control pills, the hormone levels in your body drop. Then you have withdrawal bleeding.
Hello, Birth control should not cause you to experience withdrawal bleeding UNLESS you have recently stopped taking birth control. Because you've just started taking BCP and you're experiencing withdrawal bleeding, this most likely means the doseage of birth control is not suitable for you or you need a different form of birth control. See your Doctor and meanwhile use a condom for protection until you've got a new birth control and have been taking it for one month.
Hormonal birth control suppresses the menstrual cycles to stop ovulation, thus it will take time for your body to ovulate once you stop taking the birth control. You may get a withdrawal bleed three days after you stop taking a hormonal birth control pill, this is bleeding that mimics menstruation while on the combination pill, caused by the drop in synthetic hormones when you stop taking the active pills.
Hormonal birth control lightens the amount of flow and reduces the number of days that you bleed. Any amount of bleeding counts as a period if you're on hormonal birth control.
It all depends on how long you bled before you got on birth control. Some birth control pills stop bleeding completely. If you want to know specifics your going to have to talk to your doctor.
No. You only bleed like 5%. The bleeding stops. The reason you bleed is because there's blood around your baby. When your water breaks, and the baby is out, blood comes out. But don't worry! The bleeding stops in 4 seconds.