Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Focusing on menstrual care in time of pandemic

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menstrual cycles. The government terms sanitary napkins, including homemade ones, and tampons, hygienic methods of protection.

Poonam Muttreja of the Population Fund, a non government­al organisati­on working in the area of gender sensitive policies on population and health said that cloth, if not used hygienical­ly, can lead to lots of infections. “Urinary tract infections can happen if cloth is not used properly. Soap and sun, which are needed to keep the cloth hygienic, are sometimes not availed of by women, as reproducti­ve health is a private issue and women tend to hide the clothes,” Muttreja said.

The group was trained to make sanitary napkins in 2009 after a bureaucrat in the local administra­tion initiated the effort. “We bring the material from Delhi, and unlike commercial napkins, our pads are biodegrada­ble,” Devi said over the phone from her village.

“We have even trained women in other villages to make them and even how to use them. We tell them that reusing cloth is unhygienic and can lead to infections.”

The group now has a facility in the village where women can make these napkins; there, the women have uninterrup­ted power supply, required to operate some of the sewing machines needed to stitch the pads. During the lockdown, the women have distribute­d over 500 packets in their village of 5000 residents, Devi said. The group also sells napkins — each packet has six, and costs ~12 — to women from other villages who want to sell them in their communitie­s.

Though the work that they do is vital, anganwadi workers continue to remain at high risk as they work without much protection. There are no protective gear at all provided to these women, and anganwadi workers either buy or make the masks that they wear. The need for protective gear have been echoed by several anganwadi associatio­ns. Concerns mounted i n Ji nd as f our women tested positive for Covid-19 earlier this week.

Suman, secretary of Jind’s Anganwadi Associatio­n, said that the women were on duty at Nidani village, and their samples were collected. “They tested positive, and were moved to Rohtak. Though we were told later that they are not positive, without protective gear, the women [anganwadi workers] are scared to move around in the village,” she said.

 ??  ?? Anganwadi worker Pushpa Devi with the biodegrada­ble pads.
Anganwadi worker Pushpa Devi with the biodegrada­ble pads.

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