The Telegram (St. John's)

Menstruati­on shouldn’t hold anyone back

- LEISHA TOORY Leisha Toory is a political science undergradu­ate at Memorial University of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and is the founder of the 2022 Human Rights Award N.L. nominee — the Period Priority Project.

Last year, I started a local grassroots initiative called the Period Priority Project in St. John’s, N.L. Within one year, we distribute­d more than 18,500 pads, tampons, period underwear and menstrual cups across Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Saskatchew­an, Alberta, Prince Edward Island, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and Yukon.

We set up free menstrual products stations in the gender inclusive washrooms at Memorial University, Marine Institute, St. John’s College and the College of the North Atlantic in Corner Brook.

We partnered with the Prince of Wales Collegiate to host free reusable cloth pads sewing workshops for students. We hosted presentati­ons in schools on period shaming and period poverty. We have a podcast where guest speakers shared lived experience­s on endometrio­sis, polycystic ovary syndrome, navigating menstruati­on as a plus-sized woman, and autoimmune diseases and menstruati­on, inter-alia.

We launched an interactiv­e initiative called “People who Period” where folks share their first period stories, advice for youth, ideal period care kits, and more. We also have a digital resource bank on menstrual health education that is accessible to educators and students.

We recently launched a new initiative called “Degenderin­g Menstruati­on” which aims to amplify the diversity of menstrual experience­s. The Period Priority Project acknowledg­es the fact that not all cisgender women menstruate and not all those who menstruate are cisgender women; trans folks, intersex individual­s, non-binary and two-spirit people may also menstruate. We are degenderin­g menstruati­on. We are campaignin­g for period inclusivit­y.

WHAT’S AT STAKE

Tampons can cost between $16 to $45 a package in remote Indigenous communitie­s, which means that some youth use socks instead of tampons in Nunavut, while others have to miss school in Saskatchew­an. Sustainabl­e alternativ­es such as menstrual cups and reusable cloth pads are not a convenient option for all youth. Washing and caring for reusable period products requires clean, sanitary water, which is not a reality due to the 34 long-term drinking water advisories on reserves, including some that have been in place for more than 25 years, such as Neskantaga First Nation in northern Ontario.

In partnershi­p with Leger, Plan Internatio­nal Canada conducted an online survey in April 2023 of 1,000 women aged 18-plus. The key findings are as follows:

• 82 per cent of Canadian respondent­s who menstruate believe that period products are expensive, and this increases to 88 per cent among menstruato­rs aged 18 to 24.

• 82 per cent of women in Canada support access to free period products in public washrooms, and 95 per cent of 18to 24-year-old women agree.

• One in five women have felt judged or like they were treated unfairly at work or in their relationsh­ips because of their period.

• 78 per cent of 18- to 24-year-old women have felt the need to hide their period at school or work, and a shocking 51 per cent have felt the need to hide their period at home.

• More than half (54 per cent) of women aged 18 to 24 have felt embarrasse­d talking about their experience­s with premenstru­al syndrome (PMS).

• 52 per cent of 18- to 24-year-old women think the word “period” is considered dirty or inappropri­ate in Canadian society.

• 65 per cent of Canadian women either did not receive any menstrual-health education – on anatomy, PMS, hygiene and related topics – or did but it wasn’t comprehens­ive.

• Around half (52 per cent) of respondent­s regularly avoid discussing periods and PMS with men in their personal or social circles due to shame or discomfort.

WORK CONTINUES

We are also the first and only initiative in the province of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador that focuses solely on menstrual equity.

While we have achieved some menstrual equity by breaking barriers and challengin­g stereotype­s, we still have a long way to go to eradicate period poverty.

 ?? ?? Leisha Toory of St. John’s, N.L., is the founder of the period equity local grassroots initiative, Period Priority Project.
Leisha Toory of St. John’s, N.L., is the founder of the period equity local grassroots initiative, Period Priority Project.

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