The Scotsman

It will take a lot more than free period products to end the stigma around menstruati­on Sarah Zipp & Camilla Mørk Røstvik

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Pad by pad, efforts to challenge the stigma of menstruati­on are putting periods in the spotlight. The latest move comes from the Scottish Parliament, which just passed a landmark bill to combat “period poverty”. Led by Labour MSP Monica Lennon, lawmakers unanimousl­y voted to provide free menstrual products for all people who menstruate.

Just two years after becoming the first to provide period products in all schools, colleges and universiti­es, Scotland is the first nation in the world to guarantee access to menstrual products. Although this is the first time menstrual products have been provided universall­y, Scotland follows in the footsteps of other pioneering efforts. Most notably, Kenya has provided free products in schools for years.

The Scottish bill emphasises the importance of menstrual health education in schools and promotes efforts to dismantle taboos around periods. Yet the importance of education and challengin­g stigma is often overshadow­ed by product rollouts.

For decades, activists have been campaignin­g for better menstrual health education, tax-free products and more. Yet government­al and media interest in the provision of period products is only recently gaining momentum.

Since around 2015, the movement has become increasing­ly visible. Campaigns and initiative­s run the gamut. The common theme across most of these efforts, however, is that they are product-focused. By placing the pad, tampon, cup, or pants at the centre of attention, we may be missing the larger problem: stigma.

Initiative­s featuring products and period poverty span from Netflix’s Period. End of Sentence., an Oscarwinni­ng documentar­y about reducing period stigma in India, to the On the Ball campaign in profession­al football (an effort to provide period products on football grounds).

Other taboo-smashing campaigns and commercial­s include Helloflo (sponsored by Kotex), Bodyform’s Real Blood campaign and Indian cricket’s Rajasthan Royals campaign. Additional­ly, an explosion in new menstrual management technologi­es, aka “Femtech”, has transforme­d the commercial landscape in menstrual health. Sustainabl­e period product companies like Hey Girls and THINX are flooding the market, along with period-tracking apps. In the UK, charity groups such as Bloody Good Period and Big Red Box are busy distributi­ng products.

But people need more than pads, they need knowledge and support. Access to products is enormously important, no doubt. But upon deeper reflection, it is (in part) a continuati­on of the same old taboo. As women’s, gender and sexuality studies professor Chris Bobel observes in her recent book, the good period is the period we don’t see or know about. Cover it up, conceal it and get on with life. What lies beneath is a messy reality that we rarely deal with or see.

Navigating period woes can be daunting. From excessive bleeding and pain to hormonal changes and period poverty, many suffer in silence due to menstrual stigma. Dangerous traditions, such as menstrual huts in Nepal are abusive and sometimes deadly. Globally, harmful myths and restrictio­ns prevent many from participat­ing in important activities, from sport to school to cooking.

We know that strong taboos often prevent people from asking for help and support, including asking for free products. A Plan Internatio­nal UK study found that nearly half of girls between 14 and 21 were embarrasse­d by their periods. The shame persists into adulthood: about 20 per cent of UK women surveyed by Actionaid also felt uncomforta­ble talking about their periods.

The experience of non-binary and trans people is less clear, but recent research shows that they face these challenges with additional distress over using public toilets, gender dysphoria, and discrimina­tion.

The broader menstruati­on movement seeks to fill the gaps that products cannot fill. Creative approaches to educating about menstruati­on include work from artists, comic book writers and zine makers. Advocacy groups such as Days for Girls, The Women Win Foundation and Menstruped­ia have developed education resources.

Research groups in the UK and USA are collaborat­ing with internatio­nal partners to better understand the lived-experience­s of menstruati­on around the world. The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruati­on Studies is a first-of-its kind global, open-access collection of research on menstruati­on.

So, where do we go from here? There are several key things that will help reduce menstruati­on stigma, including: Better, more inclusive, menstrual cycle and health education for all, beginning in primary school and including boys. This education should continue throughout secondary school, as teens progress through puberty and have evolving needs. Educating teachers andcoaches is also key.

Access to adequate, safe and environmen­tally sustainabl­e products that are freely available to all people who menstruate, and include a range of technologi­cal options to fit all body types and needs.

Support in terms of coping with pain, emotional and physical changes and more. Normalisin­g menstruati­on is key to helping people feel comfortabl­e and shedding the shame of periods. Here, research can support our understand­ing. A Sport England study highlighte­d barriers for participat­ion in sport and PE amongst adolescent­s, with periodrela­ted issues being one of them. There may be some fairly easy fixes, such as not requiring white shorts for sport teams. Other strategies for coping, from nutrition to pain medicine, could also make a big difference. Including diverse perspectiv­es from the LBTQ+ community, people with disabiliti­es and people from varied cultural/ethnic background­s is key.

Above all, we need to talk about menstruati­on more freely, and work towards shedding the shame that has kept people in the dark about their own bodies for generation­s.

Sarah Zipp, Lecturer, Faculty of Health Science and Sport, University of Stirling and Camilla Mørk Røstvik, Research Fellow, University of St Andrews Independen­t researcher Lilamani de Soysa contribute­d to this article. This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 ??  ?? 0 Scottish Labour MSP Monica Lennon, right, joins campaigner­s during a rally outside the Scottish Parliament in support of the Period Products Bill
0 Scottish Labour MSP Monica Lennon, right, joins campaigner­s during a rally outside the Scottish Parliament in support of the Period Products Bill

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