If your new Birth Control patch won't stay on, remove and discard it, clean the skin carefully, and put on a different patch. Contact your health care provider to have them call in a single replacement patch for the one you had to discard.
try to reapply it and if it doesnt stick then apply a new one immediately
No. If you apply it correctly and keep lotion and oils away from that area. Taking a bath/shower and doing daily activities are safe.
When you're on the birth control patch, the patch provides a constant level of progestin and estrogen. When those hormone levels drop, withdrawal bleeding occurs. That's why you bleed during your pill-free week, and why you may bleed if you have a patch fall off.
it isnt safe totake of the birth control patch because it can ruin your birth ans you can catch hrepies
A week later
If you want to get pregnant, you should stop using the birth control patch altogether.
The birth control patch is a combined hormonal contraceptive method, like the pill. With the patch, you put a new one on weekly for three weeks, and take the fourth week off.
Yes, if you stop using the patch as directed, you could get pregnant.
There is no special regimen for "leveling off" the hormones in your body. If your periods were regular before you started the patch, you will likely ovulate two to four weeks after stopping the patch, and then will have your period four to six weeks after stopping.
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.
How long has it been off? If it was off for a few hrs and it is still sticky enough to go back on fine. But don't tape back on or use glue. If it was off for a day or more you might want to ask a doctor!
Very soon
Yes, you should count the "off" week when you are figuring up how long you have been on the patch.
If you are on the birth control patch and then stop, you'll ovulate two to four weeks afterwards. The timing of ovulation is unpredictable. I think you're confused on this point; the fact that you say "we're off by 5 days" seems to indicate that you think you ovulate on a schedule on the birth control patch. That is not the case; the birth control patch normally prevents ovulation. If you want to conceive, stop using birth control.