If the condom is used properly, less that 1%
the probability is very small
You have a 1 in 2 chance of having a girl. No matter how many boys you have had in the past or how many girls you have had in the past, each pregnancy presents the opportunity to have a girl or a boy with a 50% chance. The sperm does not know that it had already produced ,say, 5 boys and needs to produce a girl for you and your partner. So with every pregnancy there is a 50% chance you will have a girl and a 50% chance you will have a boy.
In general, the probability that any child will be a girl is approximately 1 in 2. It is like flipping a coin. There is a 50-50 chance for a specific outcome each time. It would be less likely that a woman would have three sons than that she have two sons and one daughter, but each individual outcome is a 50-50 chance. If this is a brain teaser, since we are given that the woman has given birth to two sons, it could imply that any other children she has are daughters, in which case the probability is 100% - if we know that she has other children.
What it means when your period lasts longer then a week is usually stress related. It also can mean that your hormones are changing and altering your cycle. Sometimes the birth control you are on affects the amount of time you're on your period too.
Assuming that the chance of a woman giving birth to a boy or a girl is the same (in reality there's about 105 boys born for every 100 girls) then the probability of 22 of the same gender births *in a row* is: P=(0.5)^22=0.0000002384 or 1 in 4,194,304 It depends on the "when" of the question. If you point at a childless woman, and say "She will give birth to 22 children. What is the likelyhood that they will all be girls?" In that case the probability will be one in two-to-the-twenty-second. Pretty long odds. BUT, if you point at a woman with twenty one children, and ask "What are the odds that the next one will be a girl?" Then the answer is one in two. Make sense?
Yes, it is always a chance of pregnancy after sex of any kind ,protected or not !
AnswerYes pregnancy can occur. Birth control only prevents against a 98% chance of pregnancy occurring so there is still a 2% chance of pregnancy occurring. If you miss pills or take antibiotics while on birth control, this will increase the chance of pregnancy occurring.AnswerIt is possible that she can because no form of birth control is 100% effective. To be on the safe side it's best to use a condom as well, which also prevents STDs/STIs
You can get pregnant in any Birth Control even if you use a condom too. All those things do is reduce the chance if pregnancy.
You are being extra safe and reduces the chance of pregnancy and STIs even more than before!
Using condoms and hormonal BC has less than a 1% chance of pregnancy. PCOS could make the chance even lower.
Dont have sex, or use condom, birth control ect
you can do it however you would like, if your not on birth controll i recommend using a condom to prevent pregnancy. if you are on birth controll then even if you want to be safe you may still you use a condom to protect from pregnancy and even some std's. hope i helped
No. Women do not urinate out of their vaginas. Therefore, any flushing that could possibly take place does not happen. Use a condom or birth control.
The only thing that can prevent pregnancy is regular use of protection. For example using a condom every time you have sex or failing that starting birth control. Birth control used in conjunction with a condom will prevent pregnancy.
If you have sex without using some kind of birth control, then you'll get pregnant. It doesn't happen EVERY time, but if you continue to have sex without using some form of birth control, you WILL get pregnant. Use a condom. Every time, until you WANT to get pregnant.
Never. A condom is still the best way to prevent pregnancy, and the only birth control system that works ninety percent of the time or better.
Unless the condom is made of stress, no. You must use a contraceptive such as a condom, or a birth control pill, patch, shot etc. The withdrawal method is by far not the most recommended use of birth control either.