How to Use Morning After Pill in Birth Control
Emergency contraception or the morning after pill is a hormonal treatment administered if another form of birth control has failed, or when no protection was used. There are many resemblances between the morning after pill and the regular hormonal pill since the ingredients are the same. The morning after pill should not replace a regular birth control method, because used frequently it can seriously impair health.
Take the morning after pill as soon as you can after unprotected sex. Yet, you have a three or five day interval to administer it and still prevent a pregnancy. The efficiency is higher when you use the pill earlier. Do not mistake this birth control method for the abortion pill, because this is not the effect it produces. Its action at the level of the reproductive system consist in the prevention of the ovulation and the alteration of the womb lining so as to become unsuitable for egg nesting.
The morning after pill has similar side effects with the regular hormonal pill, and the efficiency rate is pretty high. The usual adverse reactions to hormonal treatments may appear nonetheless: nausea, headaches, breast tenderness and spotting. Read the list of instructions carefully and check the side effects in detail for your birth control purpose. Do not take the morning after pill if you suffer from porphyria or some liver disease. There are also drugs and herbal supplements that interact with the morning after pill decreasing its efficiency.
Get a drug prescription right away if you need the morning after pill. Do specify that you need the morning after pill urgently, in order not to be appointed for some later date. The sooner you act, the higher the risk of unwanted pregnancy. Sometimes you may not even need a prescription to buy emergency contraception; the policy differs from state to state. The cost could be a problem, as some pharmacies sell the morning after pill at very high prices. There are also cases when you can use free emergency contraception provided by some non-profit organizations.
The morning after pill does not protect you for the entire menstrual cycle, and after you take it you are again exposed to the appearance of pregnancy if you don’t use another birth control method. Do not take more emergency contraceptives during the same menstrual cycle because of the serious adverse reactions. Rely on some serious birth control method or abstain from sex.
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