the odds of getting pregnet whail on Birth Control are vearry slim its possible but vearry unlikly.
Higher than if you had been taken the birth control regularly for a few months. Most doctors recommend a second form of birth control in addition to the pill in the first month.
The odds are high, but not quantifiable. Use a back up method of birth control pills for at least seven days. Consider other options that have a lower risk of error.
The birth control pill does not help you get pregnant; it prevents pregnancy. If you want to get pregnant after Depo Provera, just have sex. Fertility returns from 1 to 18 months after stopping; ther average is 11 months.
The odds of me being pregnant are 0 as I am male.
Extremely low, but unless you're abstinent there is always a risk. Aside from that, sex during the mestrual cycle can cause infections, so be careful.
You will become pregnant if you do not take your birth control pills regularly. Birth control will not work at all if you do not take it everyday at the same time.If you do not take your birth control regularly, you are not allowing the hormones to regulate and adapt in your system. By taking your birth control every day and at the same time as directed by all physicians, you will be 99.9%+ protected from pregnancy. Also if you just started taking birth control pills, you must wait 1 month before you have unprotected intercourse, because birth control does not regulate in your system anytime before that.
Yes, it is foolish to take the birth control pill while you're trying to get pregnant, unless specifically advised to do so by a fertility specialist who is treating a particular type of hormone imbalance in preparation for additional fertility drugs. Talk with your health care provider for more sensible approaches to increasing the odds of getting pregnant.
12 days after the bleeding starts.
Birth control pills works best when taken regularly, so skipping one will mean that you've lost some protection. Odds are that you won't be pregnant though.
A tubal ligation is considered permanent birth control, but there is still a margin of error. You could become pregnant any time afterward. It is estimated that 143 women in 10,000 (1.43%) get pregnant after tubal ligations.
Accidentally? Minimal to none, as long as you are using the Pill as directed. Once you go off the pill, your fertility should return quickly and some women even get pregnant before their first "post pill" menstrual cycle.
As long as you have been taking the pill daily for 7 or more days you are protected from pregnancy. BC pills alone are 92% to 99% effective, using a condom with BC pills ups protection to over 99% and prevents STDs.
The odds of having sextuplets are 1 in 3,939,040,643.