Some medications may interact with others and cause them to be ineffective. Check with your doctor before taking a diet pill with your birth control pills.
If he is taking female birth control pills forget him. They contain hormones and he is not taking them for birth control.
Nothing, Taking birth control is her choice
Yes it can, i stopped taking my birth control and i started getting nauseated and all. Its different for all girls.But yes it can lead to throwing up
Can birth control be ineffective while taking metronidazole?
Yes. As directed by all doctors and on the instruction labels of all birth control pills, you are supposed to take your birth control everyday and at the same time. If you take your birth control at different times everyday, it is not allowing the birth control to adapt in your body the way it is supposed to and it decreases the effectiveness of the birth control as well. Some side effects of taking your pill at different times of each day may include: pregnancy, late/irregular periods, and spotting or breakthrough bleeding.
Yes, but there are some medications that interact with oral contraceptives, so it is important that you let your pharmacist and doctor (if there are different prescribing doctors) what medicines you are currently taking.
THE BEST DAY TO START TAKING BIRTH CONTROL IS MONDAY..!!!
Taking the birth control pill lowers the risk of pregnancy. Not taking the birth control pill does not lower the risk of pregnancy. You are more likely to get pregnant when you are not taking the birth control pill.
There are different drug interactions for different types of birth control. Condoms, diaphragm, NFP, and Paragard really don't have drug interactions. Mirena and Depo have very few. Patches and ring have a few more, and pills a few more than that.
Birth control pills do not increase the risk of birth defects in babies conceived by women who are or were taking them.
No, you should not be pregnant when taking birth control. Birth control is meant to lower the risk of pregnancy.