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.
Yes, it is possible for your period to be late or stop completely from any hormonal birth control.
Birth control is not a 100% way to stop pregnancy and your period makes those chances even worse.
If you don't bleed, you don't have a period. You can't have a period and not bleed.
If you get your period while wearing the birth control patch, continue using the patch as scheduled. If this becomes a problematic pattern for you, contact your health care provider.
Nope!!!! If you mean having sex while she is not on birth control pills. she WILL get pregnet. If she is having her period and she is not on pills and you have sex with her, she is gonna get pregnet.
It is called break through bleeding.Check with your doctor for other types of birth control.
Continue taking your birth control pills as scheduled.
Yes you can start birth control while on your period. Usually your doctor will tell you to start on a Sunday so it's easier to remember when you first started your pack.If you get your period on the Sunday you start you still start on birth control.
Yes. Some birth control methods stops a women from getting a period for up to 15-18 months at times. Especially if you are using the Depo-provera birth control shot.
If you skip a period while on the birth control pill, the lining of the uterus didn't build up in the previous month due to the hormones in the birth control pill. Therefore, your body does not retain the blood from your period - there's no lining to retain. However, it is possible to remain or feel bloated.
Birth control pills/patches can really do a number on your hormones so it's quite common for your periods to be all over the place (especially when you first start taking them or you stop them.)