Sun.Star Cebu

PH GOV’T, PARTNERS LAUNCH APP PROMOTING REPRODUCTI­VE HEALTH

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GOVERNMENT agencies and developmen­t organizati­ons have called for better measures to provide young Filipino women with accurate and trustworth­y informatio­n about menstrual health during the nationwide launch of the Oky Philippine­s Period Tracker App, an app made for and by Filipino girls.

The app was launched in time for the global Menstrual Hygiene Day, observed every May 28, through the partnershi­p of the Department of Education (DepEd), Department of Health (DOH), Commission on Population and Developmen­t (Popcom) and National Youth Commission (NYC), with support from the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), Australian Government and Plan Internatio­nal.

The event, “Oky for you, Oky for Me: Say hello to the period tracker app for Filipino girls, by Filipino girls,” tackled issues about menstrual health and hygiene management and featured demonstrat­ions of the easy-to-use app.

According to the DepEd, eight out of 10 schools provided access to sanitary pads to girls during School Year 2020-2021-- a marked increase from 2017-2018, when only 60 percent of schools provided menstrual-hygiene products.

While the improved access of the said items in schools is remarkable, menstruati­on and sexual reproducti­ve health rights remain sensitive topics for discussion.

More concerning is that myths and misconcept­ions about menstrual health proliferat­e on social media -- hindering girls’ access to important informatio­n critical to understand­ing their right to reproducti­ve health.

The Oky Philippine­s app was developed based on Oky, the world’s first menstruati­on education and period tracker app co-created by Unicef with girls, for girls.

The app, supported by the Australian Government, is a joint product of DepEd, DOH, Popcom, NYC and Unicef Philippine­s, in partnershi­p with Plan Internatio­nal.

In localizing the app, the team consulted with girls living in different contexts in the Philippine­s, including indigenous peoples, out-of-school children and children with disabiliti­es.

The results from the talks underwent vetting by adolescent health experts from government agencies and developmen­t organizati­ons. Oky Philippine­s also includes content relevant to the Islamic culture, co-created with adolescent­s from the Bangsamoro Region.

The Oky Philippine­s is a new platform for adolescent­s, which will be deployed through existing government programs such as DepEd’s Comprehens­ive Sexual

Education, the “WASH in Schools” programs and the joint campaign “I CHOOSE #MalayaAkon­gMaging” led by the DOH and Popcom.

Sexual reproducti­ve health is one of the seven priority areas of the DOH campaign: “Health is Life,” which focuses on health promotion to improve health outcomes.

The Oky app is also consistent with NYC’s Philippine Youth Developmen­t Plan for Health.

The Australian Government said it supports the localizati­on of the app in the Philippine­s as part of its AUD$48 million Indo-Pacific Sexual Reproducti­ve Health and Rights Covid-19 Surge Response. The program supports the Philippine­s, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea.

Oky Philippine­s is free to download from Google Play Store. The app is available in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.

The Oky Philippine­s app was developed based on Oky, the world’s first menstruati­on education and period tracker app co-created by Unicef with girls, for girls.

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