posted on 2024-09-06, 07:34authored bySharon Roose, Tom Rankin, Sue Cavill
Most adolescent girls and women menstruate. This means that for five to seven days each month they bleed through their vagina. This monthly bleeding is often accompanied by abdominal cramps, headaches, mood changes and general lethargy all of which can be exacerbated by social
stigma, myths and a lack of requisite infrastructure to manage menstruation safely, privately and hygienically. The accumulated impact of these issues have significant implications for women and girls and the potential to limit
their opportunity for education, equality, income generation and societal participation, all of which hamper self-worth and confidence. This edition of Frontiers of CLTS illustrates how CLTS programmes can be expanded to address menstrual hygiene management (MHM) in schools and communities to alleviate these stresses on women and girls.
Funding
This series is funded by Sida
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Roose, S., Rankin, T. & Cavill, S. (2015) 'Breaking the Next Taboo: Menstrual Hygiene within CLTS', Frontiers of CLTS: Innovations and Insights Issue 6, Brighton: IDS
Roose, S., Rankin, T. et Cavill, S. (2016) « Balayer le prochain tabou : L’hygiène menstruelle dans le contexte de l’ATPC », Aux Frontières de l’ATPC : Innovations et Impressions Numéro 6, Brighton : IDS