If the edges of your Birth Control patch become loose, it may not adhere properly and could reduce its effectiveness in preventing pregnancy. If the patch is partially detached for less than 24 hours, you can reapply it or replace it with a new patch. However, if it has been detached for more than 24 hours, you should replace it and use backup contraception, like condoms, for the next seven days. Always consult your healthcare provider for specific guidance in such situations.
Nothing
If the birth control fully works, there won't BE a fetus, birth control will do nothing about an impregnated egg or the baby that it will result in.
Birth control loses all of its effect the day that you stop using it.
You can get pregnant
they get sat on dahh
Yes. In the first few months of being on birth control, this happens frequently, and it fades as you continue to use it.
There is no increased risk of pregnancy if you miss the non-active birth control pills.
Nothing
Sperm is not affected by hormonal birth control; it does the same thing it does if you're not on birth control, except that there's some decrease in how much sperm can get into the uterus (due to thickening of the cervical mucus). Hormonal birth control affects the egg.
your periode will probably shift to come earlier and you will be able to get pregnant around two days after stop taking it.
No, the opposite happens you will ovulate.
yes it can. the birth control tricks your body into thinking you are pregnant. that's why you don't get your period for a while. the lactation part happens due to the hormones that the birth control have. so some lactation can occur.