The answer doesn't depend on whether you've been on the pill before. The answer depends on where you were in your menstrual cycle when you started. Talk you to your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.
Yes; if you start birth control on the first day of your period, you'll have immediate protection.
You can start the birth control pill at any time, but if you didn't start them the day of the abortion, you should use a back up method of birth control for the first seven days of the first cycle.
Start on the first day. Birth control is designed to cincide with the hormonal paterns of your body not the day of the week to work properly.
Yes you can start birth control while on your period. Usually your doctor will tell you to start on a Sunday so it's easier to remember when you first started your pack.If you get your period on the Sunday you start you still start on birth control.
There is no way to know when you will start your period when you first start taking Triphasal birth control. You just have to wait and see how your body reacts.
You can start taking the birth control pill at any time in your cycle. If you start within the first five days of menstrual bleeding, you have immediate protection. If you start at any other time, you should use a back up method of birth control for the first seven days.
Usually pills are started on the first SUNDAY after your period.
You can start birth control on any day of your cycle. If you start within the first five days of your cycle, it's immediately effective; otherwise, use a back up method of birth control, like condoms or abstinence from vaginal sex, until you've taken the birth control for seven days.
First, there is no such medical concept as "virginity." Second, yes, you can get birth control before or after you start having sex.
You can start your birth control the Sunday after your period.
You don't start with the sugar pills. You start with the first pill. If you are starting in the first days of your menstrual bleeding, you don't need to use a backup birth control method.
Yes birth control changes your cycle causing your body to have to adjust to the birth control after a few weeks it should become a normal schedule.