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5 ways to help fight menstrual poverty in SAAfter Grade 12 and 7 pupils headed back to school in the second week of June 2020, some of them have more than catching up with the academic year on their plates. ![]() Lindiwe Nkuna, founder and CEO of Lindiwe Sanitary Pads Research by Global Citizen shows that an estimated 3.7 million girls in South Africa cannot afford sanitary pads while according to the World Bank, proper menstrual hygiene enables women and adolescent girls to reach their full potential. Furthermore, poor menstrual hygiene management has been shown to result in a sense of shame, anxiety, and embarrassment that contributes to absenteeism and poor performance at school. A pack of pads in South Africa costs an average of R25. Typically, a girl goes on her period for seven days a month, which means each month she must have a minimum of two packs of pads and that costs R50 per month. A lot of young girls enter a new menstrual cycle every month without really knowing when and how they will get their next pad. This uncertainty can immensely hamper the confidence and progress of a girl child, who, like her male counterpart, has an unequivocal right to However, ordinary South Africans can help fight menstrual poverty in the five following ways:
The last thing a young adolescent girl needs is to face societal pressures outside and still come back home to fight menstrual poverty About the authorLindiwe Nkuna, founder and CEO of Lindiwe Sanitary Pads |