Yes
Providing you took the first pack correctly you are protected immediately.
My OB/GYN recommended that I take my birth control for at least a month before having unprotected sex.
A day one starter starts the very first cycle of her hormonal birth control method on the first day of bleeding. She is protected immediately from pregnancy since she started on the first day of her period.
First, there is no such medical concept as "virginity." Second, yes, you can get birth control before or after you start having sex.
yes, because it takes atleast at week for the birth control to become effective
Breastfeeding is a natural birth control but it does not work for all women. If it does work then you are usually protected for the first 3 months. I have known women that this works for an also others that have gotten pregnant again the first time they had sex after the baby was born.
The pullout method is the most unreliable method of birth control. Pregnancy is always a possibility - be protected.
If you change the birth control patch on the scheduled day but not at the same hour, you are still protected. If later than that, use a backup method for the first seven days.
birth control becomes effective after the first month of use. So you would begin the pill after your period, use up a pack, get your period and then you are protected. everytime after that, you have nothing to worry about unless you mess up on your pills.
Per my doctor in my case; First option: Birth control pills Second option: Mirena IUD You need a birth control contraceptive to get the needed hormones to thin out the thick lining of the endometrium.
The first birth control pill was introduced for public use in the year 1960.
Yes; if you start birth control on the first day of your period, you'll have immediate protection.