Yes, many woman do not have monthly bleeding while taking birth control pills. When your period is two weeks late you can use a Home Pregnancy Test to insure you are not pregnant, for peace of mind.
Starting birth control in the middle of your cycle can cause some irregularities in your period, such as spotting or changes in timing. It may take a few cycles for your body to adjust to the new hormones, so a delay in your period is possible in the initial months of starting birth control.
The following will cause early bleeding: * Irregular period * Pregnancy * UTI * Hormonal Imbalance * Stopping birth control * Starting birth control
Starting the birth control pill will not cause an earlier period. It will delay your period. Talk to your health care provider or pharmacist to clarify what you should do next.
You get a withdrawal period AFTER you go off birth control.
Birth control can cause this to happen don't worry
You should take birth control on schedule regardless of bleeding. Hormonal birth control can sometimes cause a missed period.
Taking two birth contol pills will not cause a period. It may cause nausea.
Yes, 4 days of birth control can cause an irregular period as the birth control messes up your hormones and throws your body's natural rhythm out of whack.
It's possible that changing birth control pills will change the timing of your next period.
No. Some forms of birth control pills actually cause you to not get your period for months.
Yes, BCPs can even cause periods to stop completely. Continue with pills as directed.
No. Actually when starting birth control it can cause your periods to be irregular at first.