Nothing. You might get sick though. Don't do it though.
If by "trust pills" you mean birth control pills, no they will not make you abort.
Yes
Yes, if you stop the birth control you can get pregnant, whether or not you're bleeding.
This can happen when the birth control you're on doesn't agree with you. You need to see your Doctor to go on a different brand of birth control. It's also advisable you perform a pregnancy test.
If you're not taking birth control pills for the last two weeks, you could get pregnant.
If your pills are all the same dose of hormones for each day, then nothing. If you have a type of pill where different weeks have different doses of hormones, then you will need to use another form of birth control (while continuing to take your birth control pills in the right order) for this month, as there is a chance that you may ovulate that month. You do not want to take your placebo pills (the pills you take for 1 week when you are supposed to have your period) during the middle of your birth control pill cycle, as those pills offer no birth control protection. If that was the case, then you may get a surprise period in the middle of your cycle, and you will need to use another form of birth control in order to prevent pregnancy.
yes and you should have her put on birth control pills as well. yes and you should have her put on birth control pills as well. yes and you should have her put on birth control pills as well.
Missing pills to often can cause this proplem.
Yes, unscheduled bleeding is a common side effect in the first three months of birth control pill use. Continue taking your pills as scheduled.
Yes, anti-pregnancy is safe to prevent early/unwanted pregnancy. Abortion pills are the medicines that are used to terminate a pregnancy above 12 weeks. Birth control (anti-pregnancy pills) is used to prevent pregnancy. Birth control pills are considered effective to prevent pregnancy if you consume the pill within 72 hours.
Period can arrive anytime after the withdrawal bleed from 4 weeks to 8 weeks. Its different in every woman.
Some birth control pills become effective after 1 week, others may take several weeks. You should ask your doctor, or read the instructions that came with your birth control to figure out how long your specific birth control takes to come into effect.