Volunteers take selfie pictures
with schoolchildren during an outreach medical session conducted by
Sole Hope in Kalebera village, Jinja district, eastern Uganda, in
this August 6, 2015 archive photo. REUTERS/James Akena
Absenteeism from school was 17
percent higher among girls who had no access to sanitary towels or
information about puberty
"Many girls don't know about
periods before they encounter their first one," said Paul
Montgomery, lead author of the report published in the journal
PLOS.
School attendance improves when
girls in sub-Saharan Africa are taught about menstruation and given
free sanitary towels, boosting their job prospects and self-esteem,
researchers said on Wednesday.
A team from Oxford University
carried out a trial involving 1,000 girls at eight schools in
Uganda, providing girls in six schools with sanitary pads,
information on menstruation and a combination of both.
In the largest trial of its
kind, it found absenteeism from school was 17 percent higher among
girls who had no access to sanitary towels or information about
puberty.
"Many girls don't know about
periods before they encounter their first one," said Paul
Montgomery, lead author of the report published in the journal
PLOS.
Women's rights and gender
equality,we highlights issues affecting women,
girls and transgender people.
"They are totally unprepared
because they receive no information or training on how to manage
them," he said in a statement.
Menstruation is still taboo in
many countries around the world, where it's often considered
embarrassing or shameful.
Nearly 200 girls who took part
in the trial said they felt more ashamed or insecure during
menstruation and around 140 girls said they missed school because
of it.
Ugandan School Attendance Improves When Girls Receive
Pads, Puberty Education
On Dec. 21 Oxford
University researchers published a study on the effect of giving
puberty lessons and free access to sanitary products to Ugandan
schoolgirls
Many Ugandan girls drop out of
school as they reach their teens, the study said, citing national
statistics that show only 22 percent of Ugandan girls are enrolled
in secondary education compared with 91 percent in primary
schools.
Those living in rural areas are
least likely to go to school, official figures show.
"Simple interventions like these
can have major long-term economic implications for women in low and
middle income countries, which socially empowers them," Montgomery
said of the trial.
When 10 percent more girls go to
school, a country's GDP increases by an average of 3 percent,
according to gender equality campaigners.
Each additional year of
secondary schooling leads to a 15-25 percent increase in a girl's
potential income, they say.
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