Things You'll Need
Instructions
Take a birth control pill with or after a meal. This will help coat the pill while it goes into the stomach and it won't be quite as rough on a full stomach. If you absolutely cannot take the pill during a meal, take it with milk or something with substance rather than coffee or water. This will hopefully have the same effect. Also, according to Planned Parenthood, you may also be able to help reduce nausea by taking the birth control pill in the evening instead of in the morning.
Go see your gynecologist if you are still having problems. Many times the doctor will ask you to continue the same pill for a couple more days if you are just starting on it, just to see if the side effects wear down. If not, then he will likely recommend that you go off of that certain birth control pill.
Get a different prescription if you want to continue with the birth control pill. Sometimes a doctor will be hesitant to do this depending on the symptoms and side effects that you are having, but different people will respond differently to the different types of birth control pills. Allow an adjustment period for taking these new pills. Also, make sure that you take the pill for several days, possibly even weeks, before deciding that it isn't working.
Choose a different birth control option, such as condoms. Many times nausea caused by birth control pills will happen no matter what pill you are on. When it gets to that point that your only two options are to simply put up with the nausea or to get off of "the pill," there are several other options out there that you could try that could have weaker or no side effects and be just as effective.