Photo gallery: Sanitary pads around the world

Posted by
Emily Haile
on
12 April 2019
In
Water, Health, Toilets, Girls and women, Hygiene
Elizerbeth, 54, teaching her grand-daughter, Mary how to make a sanitary cloth locally known as nyanda, in Kapyanga, Kasungu, Malawi, August 2018.
Image: WaterAid/ Dennis Lupenga

As governments fail to prioritize periods, women take the lead in finding ways to manage their monthly flow

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April 12, 2019 — From menstrual cup to cloth, menstruation skirt or homemade sanitary pad, a new photo gallery from WaterAid highlights the many and varied ways in which women around the world manage their periods.

Millions of women and girls menstruate every month, yet governments continue to ignore the issue and its links to women’s health and wellbeing. Battling the stigma that continues to surround periods, women around the world look for their own solutions around disposal, pricing, health and comfort. 

No woman or girl should have to manage their period without access to the sanitary product of their choice. Governments should play an active role in providing the infrastructure and knowledge needed to support this right.

At a minimum, women everywhere need clean water for washing themselves and any reusable sanitary materials. They also need decent, private toilets that give them space, privacy and access to adequate sanitary products and disposal methods. Yet, 1 in 9 people don’t have clean water close to home, while 1 in 3 don't have a decent toilet of their own.

Without these services, menstruation can affect women’s health and participation in social and economic life, and thus their opportunities.

Within the communities that WaterAid works, we talked to women about their periods. The result is a revealing snapshot of traditions passed on from mother to daughter, as well as women’s own, often innovative, solutions.

In Uganda, Lepera Joyce uses an animal skin ‘menstruation skirt’ when she is on her period. She says:

“Once I bought a pack of sanitary pads from the shop but I did not like them because if one has heavy blood flow she can use more than three pads in a day yet they are expensive. Also they are small, they do not absorb all blood, yet the goatskin skirt works for the whole day.”

Lepera Joyce, 23, showing her goatskin skirt which she uses when she is on her peiod, Ariamaoi village, Nabiratuk Sub County, Nakapiripirt District, Karamoja Region, Uganda, September 2018.
Lepera Joyce, 23, showing her goatskin skirt which she uses when she is on her period, Karamoja Region, Uganda.
Image: WaterAid/ James Kiyimba

In Nepal, Sangita makes her own sanitary pads. She says:

“Ready-made pads are costly and if you do not dispose them properly it will pollute the environment. In a municipality like ours where there is no plan for managing solid waste, these sorts of pads can contaminate our water source if not disposed of properly. So looking at the wider impact, homemade pads are safer.”

In many countries, cloth is the go-to material for women, which helps to tackle disposal issues in places where facilities are lacking. The environmental impact of disposable sanitary pads is huge. For example, in India, there are about 121 million women of reproductive age; if all of them use just eight sanitary pads a month, this amounts to 12 billion pads annually.

Sangita Shrestha, 32, showing the sanitary pad she has just completed. Nala, Banepa Municipality, Kavre, Nepal, August 2018.
Sangita shows the sanitary pad she has made in Kavre, Nepal.
Image: WaterAid/ Mani Karmacharya

Louisa Gosling, WaterAid's Quality Programmes Manager, said:

“Half the world’s population menstruates for a significant portion of their life, and it is not acceptable that for so long, this has not been openly discussed or made a priority. Women shouldn’t have to worry about where they might go, how they might manage their periods, or whether the appropriate facilities including running water and adequate disposal will be available.

“We welcome the decision of the Tanzanian and Indian governments to abolish taxes on sanitary products, but more action is needed. WaterAid is calling on governments worldwide to prioritize appropriate sanitation, clean water, and good hygiene in schools, homes, and workplaces, and access to sanitary products for all, to ensure that women are not excluded from society once a month as a result of a natural process.”

Ibrahim Kabole, WaterAid Tanzania Country Director said:

“It is the right of every woman and girl to be able to manage her period with dignity. While the decision of our government to abolish taxes on sanitary products was a bold step in the right direction, much more needs to be done. Half the population lives without a clean water supply close to home and more than 75 percent does not have a decent toilet, which is crucial for women to manage their periods.”

WaterAid work in some of the hardest to reach places in the world to provide appropriate sanitation facilities and menstrual hygiene skills and education to those women and girls who need it.

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For more information, please contact:

In the US: Emily Haile, Senior Communications and Media Manager, [email protected]

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