If you're a day late inserting nuvaring, you may have a different timing of your period. Putting it in a day late also increases your risk of pregnancy, so tkae a pregnacy test if your period is late.
If you leave out NuvaRing for a day, replace it with a new ring and use a back up method of birth control, like condoms or abstinence from vaginal sex, for seven days. It is best not to remove NuvaRing until the ring-free week.
If you miss the first three days of your NuvaRing cycle, you should use a backup method until you've worn the ring for seven days. If you had sex during that time, consider using emergency contraception.
Yes, you have it exactly right! You can insert NuvaRing early. That's your new insertion/removal day.
No, you only need to insert NuvaRing on the same day of the week every time, not the same time of day.
If you insert your NuvaRing one day late, you should still be protected from pregnancy. However, it's important to use backup contraception, such as condoms, for the next seven days to ensure effectiveness. If you are more than three hours late in inserting or removing the ring, follow the specific guidelines provided in the package insert or consult your healthcare provider for advice. Always refer to the instructions for your specific situation to maintain effective contraception.
If you start using NuvaRing on day one of your period, you will be instantly protected because you are not ovulating. If you wait until days 2 - 5, you could not be protected if you have already started to ovulate.
no, it is not too late
Probably not. I would just skip the ring free week and put another ring in the same day you take it out, in order to remain on schedule. or call the nuvaring company or your doctor to see what they say. The ring is effective for 4 weeks if you wear it for 3, so if you wear it for 4 I doubt it makes a difference.
You were misinformed. If you start NuvaRing within the first five days of menstrual bleeding, you don't need a backup method.
Answer 2:In order for the NuvaRing to be effective, you must use it the way it supposed to be used. You must NOT remove it the day after having unprotected sex. If it does not stay in for the entire three weeks after you put it in, it is NOT effective.Answer 1:Basically, yes. But you must visit a doctor to see why it makes you sick and what to use instead. Also, sex with Nuvaring is not unprotected sex. You protected, with Nuvaring :-).I would say it is pretty clear to anyone that the NUvaring should be used as described in the manual in order to be effective for future time. The question here, however, is if taking the Nuvaring out has consequences on being still protected from the effects of a previous sexual intercourse. The Nuvaring did its job during the intercourse, and is of course not protecting you any further if you take it out.
It won't work as emergency contraception, but if you're putting it in no later than seven days after your last three-week-or-longer ring cycle, you're protected. If this is your first NuvaRing, get the morning after pill and start NuvaRing. Then use a back up method until you've used the ring correctly for seven days (14 if you used ullipristal for emergency contraception).