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By using hormonal Birth Control Pills you can safely go months without a period.
Not if you are on hormonal birth control (The Pill, patch, shot, IUD, ring) and used it as directed.
You can't.
If you get your period while on birth control, you should continue using your birth control as scheduled. Bleeding does not change the schedule for taking your pill or changing your patch or ring.
Birth control inhibits fertilization, not menstruation. Menstrual cycle will still continue.
Yes. Some birth control methods stops a women from getting a period for up to 15-18 months at times. Especially if you are using the Depo-provera birth control shot.
Skipping your period by taking extra birth control pills or fewer placebo (sugar) pills lowers, not raises, your risk of pregnancy.
If you get your period while wearing the birth control patch, continue using the patch as scheduled. If this becomes a problematic pattern for you, contact your health care provider.
There is always a chance, but since you're using birth control it's just less likely.
Just like married people -- they have sex without using birth control or their birth control fails.
Timing of your period can be altered using birth control pills. Speak to your gynecologist, who can advise you on it.
Stress is not likely to affect your period when you're on hormonal birth control, as the medication "takes control" of the hormones that affect your period with stress.