This article explains how diarrhea can negatively affect birth control. It discusses when you should use backup contraception. It also talks about other birth control options.
How Diarrhea Interferes With the Pill
Oral contraceptives work by changing your hormone levels. This stops you from ovulating (releasing eggs from your ovaries). This, in turn, prevents you from getting pregnant. The pill is usually over 99% effective when taken as directed.
The active ingredients in the pill work over the course of your menstrual cycle. Their effectiveness depends on taking them on a regular basis. When you miss a dose or two, you may ovulate and become pregnant.
Diarrhea affects how well your body absorbs foods, liquids, and medications. Instead of being taken up into the bloodstream, they are lost in the stool.
Acute Diarrhea and the Pill
Diarrhea can happen suddenly due to an infection, food poisoning, a food allergy, or food sensitivity, like lactose intolerance.
The pill may no longer protect against pregnancy if you have severe diarrhea for more than 24 hours. Severe diarrhea means you pass six to eight watery stools in a 24-hour period. The pill also may not work if your diarrhea is not severe but lasts over 48 hours.
If you rely on oral contraception for birth control, call your doctor. The doctor’s advice will be based on:
How long you’ve had diarrheaHow frequent it isIf you’ve had sex in the last five daysWhat day of your cycle you are on
Your doctor will probably tell you to finish your current pill pack to keep your menstrual cycle on schedule. You may also need to use a different method of birth control until you finish a week of hormone pills or have your period.
Diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D) Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease Liver disease
These conditions may begin before you started taking birth control or after you have been taking the pill for a while. Chronic diarrhea is also common after gastric bypass surgery and some other procedures involving the intestines.
In addition, chronic diarrhea can come and go. It can recur for months, resolve for a period of time, then return. If you develop chronic diarrhea after reliably using birth control pills for a while, talk to your doctor.
Alternative Methods of Birth Control
The pill is just one form of birth control. Other types of contraception that aren’t taken orally and aren’t affected by diarrhea include:
Condoms Contraceptive injections Diaphragm Intrauterine device (IUD) Surgical sterilization (permanent birth control procedures) Vaginal ring
The vaginal ring, for example, provides the same hormones as the pill. The difference is that the hormones are absorbed through the vaginal wall.
If you need to use backup birth control while on the pill, choose a barrier method such as a condom or diaphragm.
Summary
If you take oral contraceptives, be aware that having diarrhea can change their effectiveness.
Diarrhea can impact the pill if it:
Occurs six to eight times in a 24-hour periodLasts for more than 48 hours
Women with chronic conditions that cause frequent diarrhea may want to consider a different birth control method, such as a vaginal ring or IUD.
There was an error. Please try again.