English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I've been on the birth control pill for a few months now, only I've never tried to change the timing of my period with it. The way my pills are I would get my period on the 21st of december. only I dont want to be on my period for christmas and my boyfriends birthday is the 22nd...so obviously I really want to change the timing of my period via the pill. If I were to delay it(like going straight into the other pack like they say you can) would I have any spotting? or can you get it early, like taking the green(inactive) pills now, and getting my period then just start a new pack. But one of my major questions is would it cause spotting, and would delaying it or getting it early be best?

2007-12-12 07:13:20 · 3 answers · asked by TeddyBear6 2 in Health Women's Health

3 answers

It would be safer to start a new pack as soon as you finish your old one. Yes, there may be spotting, but chances are it wouldn't come for up to 5-10 days if it happens at all. Spotting unfortunately is just one of the risks associated with this technique.

To skip your last week and go right into your placebos could leave you open for pregnancy. If you did this, you would need to use backup contraception for the first week of your next pack, and the whole idea behind BCPs is to not have to use backup.

2007-12-12 07:20:42 · answer #1 · answered by Brutally Honest 7 · 1 0

Even if you TRY to do this, it may not work!

Don't take the inactive pills "early", it will screw with your period and make your birth control less effective therefore increasing the chance of pregnancy.

TALK TO YOUR DOCTOR, get his/her ok to skip your placebo week. If he/she says no, then ask what you can do.

2007-12-12 11:38:19 · answer #2 · answered by Terri 7 · 0 0

you should in simple terms have the skill to flow immediately into your new p.c.. via skipping the sugar pills and which will bypass your era. you mustn't have any recognizing, yet each physique is distinctive. that could desire to in all probability be your appropriate wager.

2016-11-03 01:09:45 · answer #3 · answered by chatan 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers