Any Birth Control pill will make your period more predictable after the first few months. If you're looking to decrease bleeding or cramps, a birth control pill with a higher estrogen level may be more helpful. Most women do well on a wide variety of birth control pills, while an individual woman may have one that she finds causes more side effects than another. Your health care provider will make a guess, and then can change the pill if you have any complaints. But there is no one best pill for any situation.
No. You get a period with/without the pill. All the pill does is protect you from getting pregnant.
No it will not. If you become pregnant, you will most likey not get a period, even if you are on birth control.
If you had sex it is possible you are pregnant. The chance of getting pregnant on your period, while taking BCP is quite small.
The purpose of a birth control pill is not to get pregnant, so they are not "prone" to getting pregnant. To get pregnant the pill has to be stopped.
No. Birth control will prevent pregnancy.
Yes but you dont get pregnant on your period even without birth control.
You get a withdrawal period AFTER you go off birth control.
Everyone starts getting their period after birth control eventually.
No, birth control decreases your risk of getting pregnant.
Yes, it is rare but it can happen. They may still get their period while pregnant or believe birth control is preventing them from getting their period.
If you're on birth control pills for the first time, you don't have any more of a risk of getting pregnant than you normally would if you have been on them for a long period of time.
To keep you from getting pregnant