no you can get sick
Go to the Emergency room and get treated for a over-dose.
Birth controls come in packs of 21 or packs of 28. Packs of 21 have the 3 weeks of the evenly spread hormones which you take around the same time everyday. On your fourth week you DO NOT take ANY birth control and your period should come sometime around that. For packs of 28 (the pack I have) the fourth week is just sugar pills to remind you that you must take the pills everyday. If you have the pack of 28 your period should come around the 2nd or 3rd day you start taking the sugar pills.
I think that this was originally to remind you, for one, of the order to take them in. For another, a lot of times birth control pills have been placed in a circle so that they fit comfortably in a compact. This way, women are saved the embarassment, and only THEY know they are taking birth contol. And it is an easy indication to the woman of where in the cycle she is.
it depends. if you are taking the 28 tablet pack or the 21. if you are taking the 28 you should not have any time in between packs. i am not really sure how the 21 day pack works.
I, personally, had much more severe cramps than I usually do while I was on the Pill, and returned to normal once I stopped taking it. The leaflet that came with my packs said cramping was a common side effect.
By skipping the placebo week, you only lower the risk of accidental pregnancy. It's possible to get pregnant using the birth control pill, but taking the packs back to back doesn't increase the risk.
NO NOT AT ALL. ONCE YOU FINISH YOUR MONTHLY PILLS YOU CAN GO AHEAD AND THROW THE EMPTY DEPENCER AWAY AND GO TO YOUR DOCTOR OR WHERE EVER YOU GET THEM RIGHT AWAY.
Yes, you can skip your period indefinitely by taking five packs of birth control pills in a row, but you may experience irregular bleeding. Skipping periods does not increase the risk of pregnancy or problems with the uterine lining.
no.... but it can knock u up
Bleeding between periods is common in the initial weeks of using hormonal birth control. It normally settles down within three cycles. If it lasts longer or is bothersome, talk to your health care provider about changing formulas.
Well for one thing YOU SHOULDN'T TAKE TWO PACKS AT THE SAME TIME!! It can hurt your chances of getting pregnant. And for the other part of your question you can stop you birth control at any time when you want to get pregnant. You don't have to finish the pack.
After taking six weeks of active birth control pills without the pill-free week, you can expect withdrawal bleeding when you take a pill-free week. You may also have unpredictable bleeding.