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Yasmin to Ocella?
Has anyone changed from Yasmin to Ocella? I've felt fine all day and I took my first pill an hour or so ago and I instantly started feeling real nauseous. I googled it and now I'm seeing all kinds of side effects that people are having. Has anyone else's pharmacy switched them? If this pill affects me so much, I'm wondering if they pharmacy will give me a free pack of Yasmin since I didn't ask to be switchd.
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I haven't taken either of those, but I was really nauseas when I first started my BC. I felt sick for about an hour after I took it for a the first couple of weeks. Bleh!
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Is Ocella the generic version? If it is, it probably isn't the pharmacy that you'd have to contact, it would be your insurance. I had to fight to get my last insurance policy to keep me on the name brand. My doctor had to rewrite the prescription so that the generic couldn't be used and I had to pay an extra copay.
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The insurance company for my prescriptions is thru my Teacher's Union. They JUST sent me a letter letting me know that next time I refill Yasmin I'll be getting the generic :( I have a friend who works in the pharm. world and she doesn't say many good things about generic drugs.
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I just emailed my pharmacy turned physician assistant friend about it. All these people say that they were super nauseous, throwing up, stomach cramps. But I know people who throw up from any kind of birth control. I've never been affected more than feeling nauseous everyday for the first week of my pack.
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I've never had problems with generics, even though I've heard plenty of horror stories.
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I Second! |
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Pharmacies do this to us all the time, because the insurance companies ding them if they don't. Have your physician write 'dispense as written' on the prescription along with the brand name to keep them from giving you the generic.
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I use Triphasil/OrthoTriCyclen. My weight has decreased since I started using them. I have absolutely no other negative side effects. Granted, mine are for the treatment of PCOS and thus birth control would be a secondary result. But I highly highly highly recommend Triphasil.
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That was very nearly the same post I had in mind, except that I use the Tri-Sprintec generic of Ortho. Highly, HIGHLY recommend it whether for birth control or PCOS as I have never had a single problem. |
If you can't use a generic, and your insurance won't cover the name brand (or they won't cover Birth Control at all), check with your local Planned Parenthood. They may be able to help you with low cost or free birth control. I worked with a woman who could only use the Nuvaring and she would have payed $50 on campus, whereas PP gave it to her for $13 a month.
I sometimes wonder about insurance companies, isn't it cheaper and less of a hassle to authorize a birth control of choice for a patient instead of having to pay for prenatal care, a birth, post natal care, well baby checkups and then having the child on the insurance for 18+ years? |
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