I don't know much about this test except for that my sister took 13 of them and got neg results and 9 months later she had a son and yes it was the fact plus test everytime.
the siple answer is yes. nothing is 100% except abstinance. Being on birth control just reduces your chances of getting pregnant dramatically making it 99% effective. I just say this because I got pregnante with my first while I was on birth control.
If you haven't stopped your period, and you aren't getting morning sickness, Then WHAT are these pregnancy symptoms you say you are experiencing?
No, he has a tendency to be very rude and impatient, except sometimes with his friends.
No form of contraception, except total abstinence, is 100% effective. If 1000 couples take the birth control pill perfectly, 3 couples will have a pregnancy over the course of the year. In real life, the failure rate is about 3/100 because of user error. Among teens, about 1/8 will have a pregnancy. Missing or forgetting pills is the most common reason that the birth control pill fails. Other reasons are interfering medications or herbal preparations. Talk with your partner about how it would be for you if you had a pregnancy now. If an unintended pregnancy would be a disaster, consider using condoms along with the birth control pill or consider switching to a method with top-tier effectiveness such as the IUD or contraceptive implant.
Could be either. If she's missed her period, she needs to take a pregnancy test
ummm...yes...go get a pregnancy test.
There's really no choice except abortion.
Pain in the ovaries is not a symptom of pregnancy. There is no reason for your ovaries to hurt, except maybe in later pregnancy when the baby is taking up a lot of nearby space.
homosexuality doesn't prevent anything, except possibly, unwanted pregnancy.
No! Just except the baby and raise him/her as your child.
It's really your choice how to make a penguin cute on club penguin because nobody has control over that except for you.
Not to be taken during pregnancy except at the time of birth or by those with a chronic disease or by women taking birth control pills or hormone replacement therapy. Lower doses for children and elders.