if you start having symptoms of pregnancy, than get a home test. If it comes back positive than set up a doctors appt to be for certain, talk to your doctor about the situation and what you need to do...if pregnant as far as you know, you do what you want in the situation
take pregnancy tests and consult a physician
If it was unprotected sex (without a condom, or any oral contraceptive, or any other contraceptive) then yes.
On the average for contraception, Noristat contraceptive is only good for up to 8 weeks. After 8 weeks of the last injection, one may be able to become pregnant.
i think when your periods are back to normal and it depends how long you have been using that contraceptive
Yes, if she has her period and you had unprotected sex, then yeah. if youre worried, go and see a doctor immediately and get the Emergency Contraceptive Pill as soon as you can.
Contraceptive pills, if taken correctly are very, very safe, and the odds of getting pregnant while taking them is really, really small whatever else she's doing.
No, it is extremely rare to get pregnant on the contraceptive implant. It is one of the most effective methods of reversible contraception.
If you have the implant inserted before your last Depo Provera injection runs out, there is no increased risk of pregnancy while switching from one to the other.
There is no way to speed up the process of ovulation after stopping Depo Provera. Some women will get pregnant immediately, and for others it can take 18 months. The average is 11 months. This information is noted in the patient package insert with each injection.
An injection that stops you getting pregnant
The contraceptive implant is of no use if you are pregnant. It is normally removed. It does not harm or end a pregnancy.
No. A contraceptive can only prevent pregnancy. Once someone is pregnant it is too late to prevent it from happening.
Nine months. There is a chance that you can get pregnant from not taking your dose at around the same time each day (2-4 hours outside of when you usually take it.) If you have not taken your contraceptive pill for two-three consecutive days, you are unprotected. At two weeks, consider yourself completely unprotected.