No one can make any promises, but once your period is back to its natural unregulated rhythm your chances would be pretty much the same as if you'd never had been on the pill.
after seven days of stoping the birth control completely runs out
Usually, when you take birth control pills, you should refrain from sex for the first seven days or use alternative contraception. However, you should keep in mind that the only known form of birth control that is 100% effective is abstinence.
It's very unlikely that you'll get pregnant using birth control this way. One of the greatest risks of birth control failure is the pill-free interval -- not getting pregnant during that time, but starting to ripen an egg for ovulation in that time. Since you're avoiding the pill-free interval, the risk of pregnancy is lower for you. (This is the reason that some newer birth control pill formulations have less than a seven-day pill-free interval).
If you don't start the birth control pill on the first day of your period, you need to use a backup method of birth control for the first seven days. After you've taken the pill correctly for seven days, you can rely on it for preventing pregnancy.
Yes. With most birth control pills or other contraception, you need to use a backup method (such as a condom) for at least the first seven days after starting the contraception. If you think you might be pregnant, please see your doctor immediately.
If you start the birth control pill before the last day that you could get Depo on time, you have continuous protection. It's unlikely to get pregnant under those conditions. If you started after the last depo due date, use a backup method for the first seven days of the pill pack.
If you had sex while missing two weeks of the birth control patch, you may be at risk for pregnancy. If you had sex in the last five days, consider using the morning after pill. You can restart the birth control patch immediately. Put on a new patch, and use a backup method until you've used the patch correctly for at least seven days.
The birth control pill reaches its full effectiveness after seven days in a row.
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 can get depo provera at any time in your cycle if you can be reasonably sure you're not pregnant. If you get it during the first seven days of menstrual bleeding it's immediately effective. If you get it any other time in your cycle, you need to use a backup method of birth control for seven days. Other than that, there is no difference in getting it at a particular time in your period cycle.
It is possible to get pregnant when changing birth control pills. If you have not been on birth control for at least 2 months, you should use a back-up method, such as condoms, for the first week of starting your new birth control, to avoid putting yourself at risk of pregnancy.
No, you cannot get pregnant on your period because there is no egg to fertilise. You can however get pregnant as a result of sex during menstruation because in the right conditions sperm may life up to seven days, by which time you may ovulate. Always use birth control when having sex.