Any Birth Control pill can be taken continuously to skip periods. Seasnale and Seasonique and their generic equivalents are designed to do so, in that they have special packaging, but the ingredients are the same as many other pills.
No. You get a period with/without the pill. All the pill does is protect you from getting pregnant.
Hello there. Yes a period can be delayed if you have missed some of your birth control pills.
You can take a birth control pill before, with, or after a sleeping pill. The order doesn't matter unless the sleeping pill makes you forget your birth control.
The birth control pill can make your period lighter. "A day late" is within the norm for women on or off the pill. If you're expecting that the pill will make your period always come on a Tuesday, four weeks apart, you are likely to be disappointed. For some women the pill makes the period this predictable, but they are the exception.
You should continue taking the birth control pill daily as scheduled regardless of bleeding.
The birth control pill will not stimulate or jump start your period. Talk to your health care provider if your period is more than three months late.
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.
Taking a birth control pill will not stop you from getting your period. It might make your periods shorter and lighter. There is a pill out there that makes it so your body only gets four periods a year, but I wouldn't recommend it. Your body does things for a reason, and 12 periods a year is more natural.
regular
It depends on what type of pill you are on. If it is a regular pill that lets your have periods monthly, then you most likely will have it Wednesday. If your're taking a birth control that makes you have your period a few times a year, then you probably will not have it Wednesday.
When you stop taking the birth control, your period may change in a few ways. First, it will probably get a bit heavier and crampier again, reverting to the pattern it had before you started the pill. (Since the pill makes most women's periods lighter and less crampy, stopping it removes this benefit.) Second, your period may not have the same timing it had when you were on the pill. When you stop, your next period will come in 4-6 weeks.
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.