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Baby born. Time pass. And 7 weeks later you hadnt use any birth control method n start love making
1-the risk of a second baby?
2-to prevent the 2. baby born?


Can the mother use a pill...like a THE NEXT DAY, PREVEN etc?

CAN this (damage) go to mother to baby by milk?


And what is the best pill??????????

2006-09-29 02:17:21 · 5 answers · asked by WONDER 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Pregnancy

what is the best pill for the birth control?

14 hours left after lovemaking....
without any control methods... :(

2006-09-29 02:19:12 · update #1

5 answers

The morning after pill bc you may very well become pregnant! You shouldn't have unprotected sex esp after having a child you may ovulate at any time after having a child since your body is waked out!!!

2006-09-29 02:21:32 · answer #1 · answered by Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ Mom2two Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ 7 · 1 1

The answers here are good, I just wanted to add something about breastfeeding as birth control.
While it is true about the hormone production, every woman's body is different.
There are women that breastfeed exclusively, no supplementing, and still return to their normal cycles after the first six weeks. If you haven't started your period yet, you're probably safe, b/c you're not on your pre-pregnancy cycle yet, but the thing with that is that, you never know at what point you'll start, so you may ovulate without knowing and get pregnant off of that first egg.
So I wouldn't trust breastfeeding alone. Try one of the methods that the others have suggested.
Think of women that tandem feed their newborns and 1 yr olds, they got pregnant somehow.

2006-09-29 09:49:58 · answer #2 · answered by morethanfacevalue 3 · 0 0

The chances of getting pregnant are very high after you give birth


Whenever a mom takes a birth control pill that contains estrogen -- such as the morning after pill -- it does have the possibility of decreasing the mothers milk supply.

Some mothers who take any type of estrogen containing pill (about 1 of 100 in my reading) seem to lose their milk. In your case with a single cycle of the morning after pill, you could possibly counteract the possible decrease in milk supply by increasing nursing or full expression by hand or with a quality breast pump for 3 to 5 days after the last dose.

In respect to the baby at this time -- single exposure through mothers milk of increased hormones does not seem to cause increased risks to the infant.

If it were me though -- I would not use this as a method of preventative birth control. They have not completed long term studies as of yet on the long term health effects on the mother taking the repeated doses of the morning after pill for a long period of time.

I like the ring it's easier for me and I don't have to think about it daily and it has very low dose of estrogen!

2006-09-29 09:21:19 · answer #3 · answered by PYT 3 · 2 0

If you're exclusively breast feeding (not supplimenting feeding with formula) its a very very effective form of bith control.

Estrogene keeps your body from producing milk, but its essential to supporting pregnancy in the womans body. If you're breast feeding exclusively your body will not produce enough estrogen to cause you to ovulate. Its actually as effective as most birth control pills. BUT like the pills its IMPORTANT that you are routine, if you're breast feeding at day and at night and the baby gets all its suckling needs from the breast your body will not ovulate and you will not get pregnant.

When you are breast feeding you cannot take synthetic estrogen hormones for birth control, it stops milk production. This means your options are limited to, condoms, the Depo shot, and IUD's.

The morning after pill is an emergency contraceptive, its a high dose of estrogen. Its not recomended as regular birthcontrol for those that are nursing, because of the risk of stopping milk production. BUt in the case of an emergency it is possible. but you'd have to get a pill before the day is out, it must be taken no later than 24 hours after unprotected sex.

All that said, its only been 7 weeks since you had the baby. In most cases that means that your body is not even functioning normal yet, and even if you werent breast feeding its unlikely (though certainly not impossible) that you're ovulating yet, or able to be pregnant. Most bodies require atleast 6 weeks to shed all the uterine lining after birth.

Who ever this man is that you are with, you need to either leave him, or expect him to control himself better. I know its been hard being pregnant and now your body is your own, but unless you want more babies you need to NOT be making them. And he should be a active part of that decision.

You need to go down to your local clinic and see about the best form of birth control for your situation, and from now until the time its effective you need to make sure he's wrapping his package.

If you cant control whether or not he has sex with you, or how he has sex with you, you need to go to a womans shelter. I dont care if he is your husband. Its sexual abuse for a man to have sex with you and get you pregnant when you dont want to be, and cant make him use birth control.

2006-09-29 09:28:31 · answer #4 · answered by amosunknown 7 · 0 1

The best b/c after pregnancy is an IUD. The new Mirena is a good one that is a 5 year one. Very low hormone. Periods stops. I have had it a year. It is great!

2006-09-29 09:25:35 · answer #5 · answered by goofnwfy 4 · 1 1

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