You should consider taking Birth Control for at least 3 months to let your body regulate to the hormones and then you'll have a better chance of changing the time of your period.
Birth control pills may be used to shift and control the date of your period.
Periods can be irregular, especially in younger women. Hormones control your cycle.
yes it doesent change anything
You can get hormone tablets from the doctor which will stop a period for a wedding or holiday. You will need the same checks you would have if using oral contraceptive but they are not birth control pills and your period will come normally within a few hours of stopping them.
You can change the time your period comes the following month if you are on certain types of birth control. For example, finishing a pack of birth control pills early will make your period come earlier the next month.
If you get your period while on birth control, you should continue using your birth control as scheduled. Bleeding does not change the schedule for taking your pill or changing your patch or ring.
It's possible that changing birth control pills will change the timing of your next period.
Yes, if you want to change it then doing so is easiest after your period week when you'r starting a new pill pack. So you can start over and change the time. I suggest calling your doctor if you have any questions about your birth control.
Yes, normally birth control pills will reduce the number of days of bleeding.
yes.
Hormonal birth control changes your period while you're on it, and shortly after you stop, but the changes do not normally last. The exception is Depo Provera, after which it can take one to eighteen months (average 11) for your period to return to its previous pattern.
Your period will come naturally. Birth control does not help you get your period. Your body decides when you will get your period.