Close X
Monday, November 4, 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

    U.K.-Canada WestJet Plane Declares Emergency, Lands In Iceland

    The pilots aboard the Boeing 767 declared an in-flight emergency about two hours after taking off from Gatwick Airport.

    U.K.-Canada WestJet Plane Declares Emergency, Lands In Iceland

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter
    Sheetal Ranot, 35, of Queens, was convicted by a jury in July this year of first-degree assault and endangering the welfare of a child.

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist
    In the last two days, the home of a Baloch activist with women and children has been under siege by Pakistani paramilitary forces. Prior to this, they kidnapped more than 40 women with children from the Bolan area of Balochistan

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde
    The multi-billion dollar project — a proposed dam and hydroelectric generating station on B.C.'s Peace River — would create an 83-kilometre reservoir and flood farm land along with traditional First Nations territory.

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case
    In a 61-page ruling issued yesterday, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey in Newark said the jury had found Ravi guilty of bias intimidation under a law that was later deemed "constitutionally defunct."

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama
    Among the audience were the First Lady, Michelle Obama, who felicitated Maya Eashwaran and four others including another Indian-American Gopal Raman with the prestigious National Students Poet in recognition of their poetry skills.

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama