You may be pregnant, or you may be reacting badly to the pills, or the sickness may have nothing to do with the pills, see your doctor.
Yes, some women are nauseous when they begin taking BCP. It should subside quickly, taking the pill with a light snack will help.
Call the doctor and have him change the pill brand.
Nausea can be a side effective of doubling up on the birth control pill after missed pills.
It can give you a miscarriage
yes you have to take your birth control bill daily or you have every chance of getting pregnant, as a miss in taking it will make you pregnant.
Of course, if you are trying to get pregnant DO NOT BE ON BIRTH CONTROL!!! Now make sure the person you want to the father to be is there for you and will be there for you every step of the way, my daughter just had a baby and the babys father is no where to be found
Yes. In the first few months of being on birth control, this happens frequently, and it fades as you continue to use it.
take a birth control test immediately and if it is positive then stop taking them and see your doctor to make sure you are pregnant
Make sure first since birth control pill can cause miscarriage.
because birth control can make you think you're pregnant.
No, birth-control will not make you produce milk. The only time you will preduce milk is if you are pregnant. CONGRATULATIONS =D
Birth control pills wont make you abort. if you are pregnant you can take Plan B 1-5 days after sex to prevent the pregnancy and if you are pregnant and want to abort you have to go to a doctor.
Stop taking the birth control and take a test
THIS IS POSSILBE, BIRTH CONTROL IS NOT 100%. MY GODSISTER THOUGH SHE WAS PREGNANT, BUT FOR FOUR MONTHS SHE CONTINUED HER BIRTH CONTROL BECAUSE SHE STILL GOT HER PEROID, AND WHEN SHE WENT TO THE DOCTORS SHE FOUND OUT SHE WAS 18 WEEKS, SO YES IT CAN HAPPEN.
yes. antibiotics are not birth control. they actually work to make your body stronger
Yes, you should always continue to take your birth control unless your physician tells you to stop. Stopping your birth control and having unprotected sex will make you become pregnant. If you are experiencing any bleeding before the expected date or time of your period, you are most likely experiencing spotting or breakthrough bleeding. This is bleeding that is not considered a period, it is however a side effect from birth control that can last up to 3 months when you first begin birth control.