关于经期贫困和免费提供女性卫生用品对公共卫生的好处的概述

Udit Dave, Ashwin Palaniappan, Emma C. Lewis, Brandon Gosine
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引用次数: 0

摘要

女性卫生用品,如卫生棉条、护垫和卫生巾,对月经来潮者的健康至关重要。女性卫生用品是一个价值数十亿美元的行业,在月经来潮者的一生中,他们在16000多种女性卫生用品上花费了大约3000至5000美元。许多经济障碍阻碍了月经来潮者(其中大多数自我认同为女性)获得安全健康的月经卫生产品。生活在贫困中的妇女,特别是有色人种妇女的比例过高。因此,购买女性卫生用品往往会带来巨大的经济负担,有时会使女性根本买不到女性卫生用品,或者迫使她们在购买食品或女性卫生用品之间做出选择。这种现象被称为“月经期贫困”。由于无法获得合适的月经产品,许多妇女报告说用杂物代替物品,这会导致严重的健康并发症,如中毒性休克综合征和癌症。除了潜在的健康风险外,月经还经常带来负面的社会后果,因为许多女性报告说,由于经历了月经紧急事件,并且没有找到公开的女性卫生产品,她们不得不离开工作场所或学校。大量俚语和负面文化内涵经常与月经有关,许多女性报告称,由于月经症状管理和资源分配的多个方面,她们感到压力和焦虑。纽约市在公立学校、监狱和无家可归者收容所免费提供女性卫生用品,为323000名月经来潮者提供免费用品,每人每年的费用约为5.88美元,这是具有成本效益的。肯尼亚、澳大利亚、新西兰和苏格兰等国也领导了一些倡议,强调改善月经卫生产品的获取对公共卫生的成本效益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
AN OVERVIEW OF PERIOD POVERTY AND THE PUBLIC HEALTH BENEFIT IMPACT OF PROVIDING FREE FEMININE HYGIENE PRODUCTS
Feminine hygiene products such as tampons, pads, and sanitary tissues are crucial to a menstruating person’s health. Feminine hygiene products are a multi-billion-dollar industry, and over the course of a menstruator’s life, they spend between roughly $3000-$5000 on over 16,000 feminine hygiene products. Many financial barriers exist that prevent menstruators, most of whom self-identify as women, from accessing safe and healthy menstrual hygiene products. A disproportionately high number of women, especially women of color, live in poverty. As a result, purchasing feminine hygiene products often poses a substantial financial burden, sometimes preventing women from being able to buy feminine hygiene products at all or forcing them to choose between purchasing food or feminine hygiene products. This phenomenon is referred to as “period poverty.” Due to a lack of access to appropriate menstrual products, many women report substituting debris items, which lead to severe health complications such as toxic shock syndrome and cervical cancer. In addition to potential health risks, there are often negative social consequences associated with menstruation as many women report having to leave their workplace or school due to experiencing an emergency menstruation event and not finding feminine hygiene products publicly available. A plethora of slang words and negative cultural connotations are frequently associated with menstruation, and many women report feelings of stress and anxiety due to the many facets of menstruation symptom management and resource allocation. New York City made feminine hygiene products free in public schools, prisons, and homeless shelters, providing 323,000 menstruators with free products at a cost of roughly $5.88 per person per year, which is cost-effective. Nations such as Kenya, Australia, New Zealand, and Scotland have also led initiatives highlighting the cost-effective public health benefit of improving access to menstrual hygiene products.
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