Go to a doctor ASAP.
that is very possible. It can happen although it is rare
Yes, if you stop the birth control you can get pregnant, whether or not you're bleeding.
All of them. There is no medical need to have a period. While taking the pill the lining of the uterus stops building up the way it does without BCP. The bleeding every month is actually withdrawal bleeding in response to hormones dropping when the pill is stopped for a few days.
for the first three months birth control messes with you a bit. You may skip periods, have only very light bleeding or spotting. It's something your body has to get used to. birth control does NOT stop a pregnancy that happened before starting it. Plan B however does if taken within the first 72 Hours.
There is no medical concept of birth control pill rejection, but some women may have changes in their periods on one birth control pill that they don't like. Changing to another brand may help. My friend has been switching back and forth between the b.c. that makes you have periods every three months and Ortho and her last period lasted twelve days with lots of cramps. Her doctor recently had her take two regular pills of Ortho for four days.. then her bleeding stopped and he adviced her to stay with Ortho!
It is normal to have light periods or no period at all while birth control.
Hello. No bleeding after using birth control isn't harmful hun. If you have stopped birth control and are bleeding, this is perfectly normal and is happening because your experiencing break through bleeding from the withdrawal of the pill. If you are bleeding while on birth control and have missed some pills - then this is why your bleeding. Dont miss any pills and you wont bleed. If you are bleeding while on birth control and are taking the pills correctly and haven't missed any, then this is most likely due to the doseage of the pill not being high enough. See your doctor for a change of pill or increase in doseage. Take care!
It means you have stopped bleeding
Get a cotton and press it to the bleeding part
Bleeding between periods is common in the initial weeks of using hormonal birth control. It normally settles down within three cycles. If it lasts longer or is bothersome, talk to your health care provider about changing formulas.
The birth control pill makes bleeding lighter by prevening heavy buildup of the uterine lining. When you stop, your period will go back to its previous pattern, before you were on the pill.
First, you should determine what effect method of birth control you want to start if you want to avoid pregnancy. Starting hormonal birth control may control bleeding. If you want to get pregnant, your best bet is to keep in mind that irregular bleeding will go away without treatment. Talk with your health care provider about options if the bleeding is troublesome.