Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
International

Free Sanitary Pads, Puberty Lessons Can Improve Girls’ School Attendance

IANS, 22 Dec, 2016 12:11 PM
    Giving free sanitary pads and lessons on puberty to teenage girls can be an effective way in boosting their attendance at schools, which can have long-term economic implications for women in low and middle-income countries, reveals a new study. The study has been published in the journal PLOS ONE.
     
    Researchers from the University of Oxford in London indicated that in schools where sanitary pads and puberty education were not provided absenteeism among girls were 17 percent higher compared with schools where girls received pads, education or a combination of both.
     
    The paper showed that there is now good evidence to back up such efforts to improve the education of girls and women, thereby raising their esteem and job prospects.
     
    The research spanned 18 months, involving 1,000 girls at eight schools in Uganda. The team found that schools where sanitary pads or puberty education were not provided missed school for nearly three and a half days.
     
     
    “Many girls don’t know about periods before they encounter their first one. They are totally unprepared because they receive no information or training on how to manage them,” said lead author Paul Montgomery.
     
    “Just by giving girls lessons in puberty or a purpose-built sanitary pad means they were more likely to stay at school during their periods, minimising the risk of disruption to their schooling. Simple interventions like these can have major long-term economic implications for women in low and middle income countries, which socially empowers them,” Montgomery added.
     
    “In developing countries, it is particularly important to be sensitive to the girls’ social norms as we need to avoid stigmatising girls through singling them out for pads. There is therefore an urgent need to carry out further research examining this feature of possible intervention programmes,” said co-author Julie Hennegan from the University of Oxford.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Edmonton Student Unaccounted For In France; University 'Very Concerned'

    Edmonton Student Unaccounted For In France; University 'Very Concerned'
    EDMONTON — An Edmonton university says one of its students is missing after a deadly truck attack in France.

    Edmonton Student Unaccounted For In France; University 'Very Concerned'

    Facebook 'Safety Check' Lets Users Reassure Friends In Crises Like Nice Attacks

    Facebook 'Safety Check' Lets Users Reassure Friends In Crises Like Nice Attacks
    TORONTO — In the wake of an attack that saw a truck slam into a crowd of Bastille Day revellers in Nice, France, killing at least 84, Facebook has activated its "safety check" feature.

    Facebook 'Safety Check' Lets Users Reassure Friends In Crises Like Nice Attacks

    Man's Nose, Ear Chopped Off For Eloping With Relative In Pakistan

    Man's Nose, Ear Chopped Off For Eloping With Relative In Pakistan
    According to police, the 20-year-old girl, who lives in Jhang district, had eloped with her relative Imran Ali sometime ago.

    Man's Nose, Ear Chopped Off For Eloping With Relative In Pakistan

    Pakistan Christian Man's Hands 'Chopped Off' For Refusing To Convert To Islam

    Pakistan Christian Man's Hands 'Chopped Off' For Refusing To Convert To Islam
      Police, however, have dismissed the victim's allegation, claiming he lost his hands in a train accident.

    Pakistan Christian Man's Hands 'Chopped Off' For Refusing To Convert To Islam

    After American Jab, Pakistan Says Committed To Eliminate Terrorism

    After American Jab, Pakistan Says Committed To Eliminate Terrorism
    "The extra-ordinary success of operation Zarb-e-Azb is a testimony to Pakistan's unwavering commitment to eliminate terrorism from the Pakistani soil," he said.

    After American Jab, Pakistan Says Committed To Eliminate Terrorism

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 33, Dies After He Falls Asleep Behind Wheel In UK

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 33, Dies After He Falls Asleep Behind Wheel In UK
    Ronak Patel, 33, a trainee anaesthetist from Ixworth village, Suffolk county, had been singing on the phone to his wife to help keep him awake, an inquest heard this week.

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 33, Dies After He Falls Asleep Behind Wheel In UK