If the patch is new to you and the side effects are bearable, you may want to give it a little more time as hormone levels will start to level off after the first few months, so those hormonal side effects tend to go away.
Birth control patch
What if I don't like the hormonal side effects of the patch?
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What should I do if my birth control changes my mood?
Everybody responds to birth control differently. If you feel like your hormonal birth control is changing your mood, it’s time to talk to your health care provider. It might be a matter of switching methods or deciding whether to avoid hormonal birth control altogether, or you may choose to wait it out since some negative side effects go away with time.
I heard that hormone-filled pee is killing our fish and harming the environment. Is taking hormonal birth control bad for our water?
The simple answer is: yes, hormones in birth control are getting into the environment through pee. But—and this is a big but—it is small compared to other sources of estrogen. Current research finds that the contribution of EE2 (the primary active ingredient in the pill, ring, and patch) to the total amount of estrogen in our waterways is small. Bigger—much bigger—sources of estrogen in the environment come from industrial and manufacturing processes, agricultural fertilizers and pesticides, the drugs we give livestock. and the waste and runoff produced by these sources. Avoiding birth control with estrogen hormones will not eliminate the environmental impacts of estrogenic compounds.
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