CBC Edition

Periods are a nightmare in Gaza's crowded, unsanitary camps. Women are using birth control to skip them

- Yasmine Hassan

Crouched inside her makeshift tent at a camp in Rafah, Samah El-Nazli fidgets as she recalls what her living conditions have been like since the war be‐ gan. The mother of four is among millions of Gazans struggling to access food, water and sanitation in the overcrowde­d camp after losing their own homes in the strip.

"There's no way to keep clean, there's no way to be comfortabl­e - we're living a completely destroyed life," she said.

Many women and girls liv‐ ing in the strip have opted to start taking birth control as a way to stop their periods as the conflict nears its eighth month.

El-Nazli, 34, said she tried everything to manage her cy‐ cle - from adult diapers to dirty cloth - before seeking out medication to stop her period altogether.

"None of these things are good," she said in an inter‐ view while she reorganize­d the pots and pans lining the nylon walls of her tent.

Humanitari­an groups and experts in reproducti­ve health say the choice women in Gaza face shows how des‐ perate conditions are in the besieged enclave and how the war is disproport­ionately affecting women and girls.

Over half a million men‐ struating in Gaza

El-Nazli was displaced early in the war from her home in Abraj el Mokhabarat, a town in northern Gaza. She sought refuge at Al-Aqsa hospital be‐ fore making her way south with her family and pitching a tent in Rafah in October. She's currently living with her four daughters in the dis‐ placement camp.

Getting aid into the Gaza Strip has become an issue since Israel imposed a siege on the area following the Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7, making supplies in shops and pharmacies limited and ex‐ pensive.

Before the war, El-Nazli said, everyone had their own homes and spaces. Now, they have tents.

"It's where I pray, where I sit, where I bathe myself and my daughters," she said. "There's no cleanlines­s. There are no bathrooms in the place where we live."

WATCH | 'They started asking for the pills that will delay the menstrual cycle':

According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), there are more than 690,000 menstruati­ng women and adolescent girls in Gaza - all of whom are fac‐ ing limited access to men‐ strual products and inade‐ quate washroom facilities.

In a report published last month, UN Women said an estimated 10 million dispos‐ able menstrual pads or four million reusable sanitary pads are needed each month to meet the need in Gaza.

Laila Baker, regional direc‐ tor of UNFPA in the Arab States, said the living situa‐ tion is a "nightmare" from the perspectiv­e of privacy for women and girls. She said the bathrooms in camps, schools and hospitals are overcrowde­d because the buildings - sometimes de‐ signed for no more than 400 people - now house thou‐ sands who've been displaced from their homes.

According to Baker, there are long lines for toilet facili‐ ties that are serving up to 1,000 people.

"Even if you could find wa‐ ter or soap, which are in short supply, it would be with the complete lack of privacy," she said.

"So some women and parents are resorting to des‐ perate, desperate measures and giving birth control pills where they can get their hands on them."

Women can access the pill through pharmacies or the Health Ministry, which can still provide the medication locally, says Rafah pharma‐ cist Hatem Muslim.

The ministry gets the pills from abroad, he says, but there was little demand for them before the war. He noted that this created a large stockpile that's now being used to keep up with an increased demand.

"We realized that many women are taking birth con‐ trol pills, or period-delaying

pills as they call them."

Dr. Jerilynn Prior, the sci‐ entific director of the Centre for Menstrual Cycle and Ovu‐ lation Research at the Univer‐ sity of British Columbia, says it's "terrifying" that women in Gaza are resorting to the pill not as a matter of choice, but as a matter of circumstan­ce.

"The idea that women in the war zone in Gaza don't have adequate sanitary ac‐ cess is just awful," she said. "It's yet another of the tragedies of war that women tend to bear the brunt of it."

Women start their periods when their hormone levels drop roughly once a month as part of their menstrual cy‐ cle. Usually, those on hor‐ monal birth control take a placebo pill during the week of their period.

Birth control can delay a period if women skip the placebo pills and continue taking hormonal pills instead. This prevents the dip in hor‐ mones and without that trigger, Prior explained, men‐ struation doesn't begin.

In Gaza, birth control pills are much cheaper and more readily available than pads or tampons. Muslim said a month's supply of birth con‐ trol pills costs roughly 10 shekels, or $3.65 - less than half the current cost of a pack of pads.

WATCH | The struggle to get aid to Gazans in need:

Choosing between food and hygiene

For Fadwa Muhanna, 30, the decision to take birth control to delay her period meant having more money to feed her family.

"We face a lot of difficul‐ ties getting necessitie­s like feminine hygiene products and if we find them, the prices are very high," Muhan‐ na said in an interview from the displaceme­nt camp in Rafah.

"This isn't an easy amount to spend for a big family, so it's 'Do we get our needs or do we get sanitary napkins?' "

Muslim, the pharmacist, says he also sees mothers come in looking to start their daughters on birth control so they don't have to stand in line for hours to use bathroom facilities in the camps.

He says the girls are often embarrasse­d about the topic of menstruati­on in general and "the fact they can't main‐ tain their personal hygiene."

Although women using birth control as a means of skipping their periods is not uncommon, Prior says it's not the most effective strategy because it can sim‐ ply "change the scheduled bleeding to unschedule­d spotting."

Although the pill is safe to use, Prior says women who use it long term to skip their periods could be at a greater risk of blood clots compared to those who use it cyclically. She says the risk of blood clots in young women is gen‐ erally low but notes the risk increases on the pill.

She says there should be an alternativ­e to the pill for women who don't have ac‐ cess to a regular supply of tampons and pads and don't need contracept­ives.

"The menstrual cup would be a better way to improve sanitation for menstrual flow than continuous combined hormonal contracept­ives," Prior said, referring to de‐ vices made of rubbery mater‐ ial that are inserted into the vagina to collect menstrual fluid. They can be emptied, washed and reused.

However, getting access to such devices in a warzone is difficult, if not impossible.

Baker says humanitari­an aid groups need unfettered access to Gaza to deliver aid, including menstrual pads and tampons.

"We need a complete and permanent humanitari­an ceasefire," she said, so women don't have to choose between buying menstrual products for themselves and feeding their families.

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