The Day

Shortage of tampons being addressed

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Tampon manufactur­ers say they’re working to replenish the supply of their products after shortages were reported on shelves across the country.

On Monday, U.S. Sen. Maggie Hassan sent a letter to Procter & Gamble Co., Edgewell Personal Care Co., Johnson & Johnson and Kimberly-Clark Corp. asking what they plan to do to address reports of diminished supply and price gouging by third-party sellers. The Democrat from New Hampshire cited several news reports chroniclin­g a shortage. It comes on the heels of a baby formula shortage and rising prices on everything from food to clothes to gas — to menstrual products.

The companies should “take immediate action to increase the tampon supply and end unnecessar­y price increases,” Hassan said in the letter. “Access to menstrual products should be treated like every other essential good.”

In-stock levels for feminine products hovered around 92% for the week ended May 29, according to IRI data, around normal levels. The data doesn’t isolate for tampons alone.

P&G, which makes brands including Tampax and Always, has a near-50% market share in menstrual care supplies in the U.S. The company is “working hard to ramp up production to meet the increased demand for our products,” a spokespers­on said in an emailed statement Friday. Edgewell, the company behind the brands Playtex and o.b., cited surges of the COVID-19 omicron variant as a cause for any diminished inventory.

“We have been operating our manufactur­ing facilities around the clock to build back inventory and anticipate returning to normal levels in the coming weeks,” a spokespers­on for Edgewell said in an email.

The reported shortages are the latest blow for consumers for whom the products are essential: The average cost of a box of tampons rose 9.8% in the year through May 28, according to NielsenIQ, and 8.3% for a box of pads. Such increases can be especially difficult for poor or low-income consumers, many of whom already struggled to afford such products. Federal programs such as the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program do not cover menstrual products, and 26 states charge tax on menstrual products.

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