Not necessarily. If you are a young person (or nearing menopause), irregular periods are very normal. In the first few years after puberty, you may miss a period, have only a short period, or have regular periods for several months and then skip a month. If you have been having sexual activity, you certainly want to know if you are pregnant; a simple test, available at any drug store, can tell you if you are. There are many reasons for a period being delayed (pregnancy is only one of them); often, the cause is nothing serious and the body will regulate itself. But if you are also experiencing pain, you may want to contact your doctor, so that he or she can determine if other factors are causing your period to be delayed.
Doubleplusgood if it's a boy.
If you are bleeding, and you had your period two weeks ago, there is usually nothing to be concerned with. If your period continues to be irregular, there is medication that can be taken to help regulate it.
You should get you period about once a month, every four weeks or so.
A period should arrive somewhere between six to eight weeks. Since every woman is different, it could arrive sooner than that, or later than that.
Book an appointment to see you doctor!! You should probably have an ultrasound scan to see what's happening.
It would probably not be accurate since it is testing for the hormone HCG and you should wait until your period is due in anther 2 weeks to test again for accurate results
The duration for a period varies with the individual female but two weeks can be considered excessive. Contact a gynaecologist immediately.
It might but you should take a pregnancy test at least 2-3 weeks after having sex
It could take 6 weeks for you to see a proper period.
My hcg level was 110 and that was drawn at 3 weeks 4 days since last menstrual period.
It means it is approximately four weeks since you conceived, but six weeks since the start of your last period. Pregnancies are dated from the latter date, so you wouldn't say you were four weeks pregnant.
You shouldn't get your period if you are breast-feeding. But if you have decided not to breast-feed, your period should come at about 6-10 weeks later.