I dont think so why do you think they are called HUMAN female birth pills?
Yes, giving a cat human medication can be fatal. There is a huge difference in size and metabolism between a cat and a human, so even a tiny dose of human medication can easily overdose a cat.
Let me get my crystal ball ....Yes, you did because you didn't use a condom or birth control pills.
There's no such thing as "human amoxicillin", and you should not give unprescribed antibiotics to your cat (you shouldn't even HAVE them... you're supposed to take all the antibiotics prescribed for you, even if you "feel better" when you've still got pills left).
Yes, Augmentin pills can be dissolved in water in order to give to a cat. The pills expand at first, but then begin to dissolve into the water.
Yes but they have to be the right kind of pills. Some sleeping pills are 'safe' that is you cannot overdose on them. Take him/her to the vet, wehere they will do it humanely.
Surprisingly, human birth control pills do work on some animals. Some of the animals are gorillas, bonobo, orangutan, and lar gibbon.
If he is taking female birth control pills forget him. They contain hormones and he is not taking them for birth control.
Birth control pills are for reducing, not increasing, fertility.
When taking the birth control pills you still have a monthly cycle. That is what the different color pills are for in your pack. So that you still have your cycle every month.
Because estrogen and progesterone hormone levels control the female cycle and the pills operate by "skewing" the cycle.
no, but some hormone pills like birth control pills affect the urine pH, and lab can find out if male use female urine
The causes are as follows: * UTI * Missed birth control pills. * Recently stopped/started taking BC pills. * Vaginal infection. * Implantation bleeding. * Pregnancy. * Break through bleeding * Recently took MAP
Birth control pills have hormones because hormones are the chemicals that affect ovulation and other aspects of fertility in the female body.
I am not allergic to birth control pills.
Packet of birth control pills on the kitchen counter, receipts from the pharmacy for birth control pills, or your wife asking, "Have you seen my birth control pills?"
No, birth control pills are not narcotics.
many birth control pills have generic equivalents.