If I’m on the Pill should I take a break from it every year?
There is no reason to take a break from the contraceptive pill – it does not build up in your body and will not affect your fertility permanently.
There is no reason to take a break from the contraceptive pill – it does not build up in your body and will not affect your fertility permanently.
Gay pride is there to promote self-affirmation, dignity, equality rights, increase visibility as a social group, build community, and celebrate sexual diversity and gender variance.
The contraceptive implant is more than 99% effective in preventing pregnancy, but does not protect you from getting Sexually Transmitted Infections.
The contraceptive implant (LARC) is a small flexible tube that’s inserted under the skin of your upper arm. It releases the hormone progestogen to prevent pregnancy. It is also known as “LARC”, or long-acting reversible contraception.
Contraception is a way of reducing the chances of you or your partner from getting pregnant. Condoms, “the Pill” and LARC are common types of contraception.
If you don’t take contraceptive precautions when having sex, the girl may get pregnant which may lead to complications if you are not both ready to be parents.
It is illegal for people in a ‘position of trust’ over us to have sex with under-18s in their care. This includes teachers, carers and doctors, who we trust to look after us.
A girl age 16 or over who has sex with a boy under 16 can be prosecuted for indecent assault (with a maximum sentence of 10 years).
Underage sex: if she is under 13 he could get life imprisonment – it is classed as “statutory rape”. There is no defence to this charge – even if a boy says the girl was willing or that he thought she was older than she was, it would not matter.
Underage sex: if she is 13-15, the boy could go to prison for two years even if she agrees. The law sees it as sexual assault – a criminal offence.