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Pregnancy scare, opinions please
Hello,
This past weekend (May 7-9) I got to see my girlfriend for the first time in a month plus. We of course had sex She has been taking Yaz since after her period in March and had been on it for 5 weeks and 5 days as of the 7th. Her last period was about 2 weeks and 4 days before the 7th. We decided to have sex without a condom as various sources said Yaz was effective after 30 days (though their own site says 7 days which does not seem trustworthy at all) I came inside of her on all three days. Each day she took the pill at the same time she normally takes it and has done so in the days since the 9th. She has not missed one pill since she began in March. Yesterday, the 12th she had spotting. She has not had spotting before. However, both Yaz's site What to Expect From YAZ (para. 11-13) and other resources I have read on the internet have said that spotting may occur when a woman first starts the pill. This site Spotting in the Menstrual Cycle: Assessing the Health Risks Associated with Unexpected Vaginal Bleeding has dates during a woman's cycle when spotting may occur Despite this both she and I are worried she might be pregnant I have two questions: Is spotting normal at such a time during her cycle as the above article suggests? (though she isn't really in any of the times suggested by that article) What are the odds of her being pregnant? Any other advice/input is greatly appreciatedThank you Last edited by gonthier; 05-14-2010 at 11:37 AM.. |
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Caramel: IF IT SAYS A SEVEN DAY BREAK, TAKE A SEVEN DAY BREAK. See the sticky Caution Take Only As Directed.
Gonth: Whatever pill a woman is taking, spotting can be expected, especially during the first few months. This spotting can occur at any time but is a bit more likely on the dates that site shows. If one hundred women use the pill exclusively, but properly, for one year, three can be expected to become pregnant. If your g/f is as diligent and disciplined as you describe, and all women should be, you have nothing (or very, very little) to worry about. The vast majority of women using hormonal birth control (pill, ring, shot, patch, implants) AND in a stable, monogamous relationship, use no other contraception. Effectiveness does not depend upon taking the pill any specific day; it is dependent upon taking the pill every single day as directed. Fertility is not controlled by hormones day by day but, rather, cycle by cycle. The biggest caution is be very careful using other medications or supplements, some of which may affect the efficacy of the pill.
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