You certainly can be, this varies from person to person but the Birth Control should not have effected your fertility at all and when you stop taking it your body should go back to its normal state.
It's never easy to get pregnant using effective birth control.
If you are using your birth control as directed, there should be a very small chance of getting pregnant. I'm not sure if the length of time you've been on birth control matters, but if you are inconsistent when it comes to taking/using it, the likelihood of getting pregnant increases at least a little. It really depends on your form of birth control.
Hi, Your question is: Is it hard to get pregnant after coming off birth control? Once you begin ovulating again naturally after coming off the pill your fertility level will be just the same as it was before you started birth control and will not effect your fertility. Once that you come off birth control, Yes you can get pregnant because it is still very easy to become pregnant. If you take your last birth control pill that makes you have your period, and that last day that you have your period, and you have unpertected sex, YES you will conceive.
It all depends on your metabolism, for instance my wife fell pregnant while she was on the pill. it proves to easy for some and takes a Little longer for others.
It sounds like normal birth control. Technically it could take up to a month for your birth control to be in full effect. But this could be different based on they types of birth control you take, This information should be located within the packaging of your birth control. It is a hormone therapy. If you are concerned about becoming pregnant while starting your birth control you should use another form of contraception (condoms). Or just not have sex in that time. (You should probably use condoms anyway just as a safety measure as birth control does not protect against std's.) If you are concerned that you are pregnant you should consult a doctor and stop taking your birth control. Birth control is not an abortion pill (that is something totally different) but it could potentially harm the fetus. A good way to know if you are pregnant is missing periods (if you have been taking your birth control regularly it should be easy to calculate).
If you're pregnant, you'll have a positive urine pregnancy test, even if you're miscarrying. That's the cheap and easy way to tell.
In the second month it's supposed to be 99% effective. It takes one week for the pill to start working and a month for it to be 99% effective.
If you are trying to conceive, and are having symptoms of pregnancy but your period hasn't yet returned, then test when you have symptoms. If you do not want to get pregnant, see your health care provider to start on a new method of birth control.
Mirena is a birth control company that offers contraceptive devices alternative to the typical condom. One example is their intrauterine birth control; easy to use, convenient, and 99% effective.
Easy, tell your base commander and you will get leave hopefully.
Like all medication, when it expires, it becomes less effective (and increases in its ineffectiveness as the time goes on). It's not easy to give a percentage as to how effective compared to non-expired pills, but if using expired birth control is your only option, I would use it with a condom or some other non-hormonal birth control to make sure you don't get pregnant. Otherwise, the likelihood of pregnancy will increase.
It's easy to change from the birth control pill to Mirena. Continue taking your pill as scheduled until the Mirena insertion. You can have the IUD inserted at any time that you are using an effective method of birth control.