Condoms, female condoms, spermicide, the sponge, foam, or IUD.
Not all types of birth control need a prescription. Condoms, female condoms, the birth control sponge, and spermicide are among them even though their controlling effects are somehow less than ones with a prescription.
Birth control is a type of contraception (means for preventing pregnancy). Other types include condoms, spermicide, IUDs, etc.
Spermicide condoms are less effective in preventing pregnancy compared to other methods of contraception. They have a failure rate of around 18% with typical use. To improve effectiveness, using spermicide condoms in combination with another form of birth control, such as hormonal methods, is recommended.
Birth control suppositories are one of the least effective methods to begin with. Withdrawal is more effective than spermicide used alone. Consider getting some condoms and throwing out the expired suppositories.
Answer Having no sex at all.Without condoms or birth control you can't prevent pregnancy if you keep on having sex.First of all, without condoms you can spread all kinds of diseases if you or your partner carries HIV or any other STD's.Second, birth control is just the extra protection against pregnancy along with condoms, don't think you can just use birth control and go on without condoms. Unless you know for sure you or your partner don't carry HIV or any STD's and also don't mind about getting pregnant. Or you can have a surgery which does not go without risks and is non-reversible.
You could get on birth control, use condoms, use spermicide, use a diaphram, not have unprotected sex EVER unless u are ready for a kid. Those are your best bets.
The best way to stop a girl from getting pregnant is to take steps to prevent the pregnancy in the first place by using birth control. There are lots of options: the depo-provera shot or birth control pill for her, condoms, spermicide, etc. Condoms are your best bet because they will protect her from pregnancy and protect you both from STDs
Condoms.
Birth control only protects against pregnancy. Condoms protect against sexually transmitted diseases.
It makes no more sense than taking three birth control pills a day. Taking the birth control pill and using the patch at the same time offers no additional pregnancy protection. If you want to double up on birth control to lower the risk of pregnancy further, use condoms, spermicide, the diaphragm, or the cervical cap.
Condoms.