Health Economics and HIV and AIDS Research Division (HEARD), University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville Campus, Private Bag X54001, Durban, 4000, South Africa.
Legal Resources Centre, P.O. Box 9495, Johannesburg, 2000, South Africa.
Reprod Health. 2020 Apr 15;17(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-0896-1.
There has been increased attention to the menstrual health management (MHM) needs of girls and young women in Eastern and Southern Africa, relating to dignity, and to the potential link between the lack of access to sanitary products and school absenteeism. In the South Africa, there is inadequate evidence to guide appropriate national responses. This study explored the extent of access to modern sanitary products amongst female high school learners and the range of needs and challenges that they face in managing their menses in school settings in Gauteng, South Africa.
We collected mixed method data from 10 schools in Sedibeng district between June and August 2018. The qualitative component consisted of in-depth interviews with female learners (n = 30), educators (n = 8) and mothers of female learners (n = 9) and focus group discussions (FGDs) with male learners (n = 7) and female learners (n = 10). Five hundred and five female learners were recruited into the quantitative component consisting of a self-administered survey focussing on factors associated with access to sanitary products.
The median age of survey participants was 17 years (interquartile range 16-18 years) and average age at menarche was 13.36 years. One in seven female learners reported not having enough sanitary products for every period in the last 3 months and this was reflected across the school quintiles. There was a complex interaction between menstrual-related challenges (physical discomfort, teasing, and feeling distracted in class) experienced by female learners, often amplified or compounded by factors in the school environment (unhygienic sanitation facilities and inadequate rest areas), and schooling participation and attendance. Girls who did not have enough products for every period in the last 3 months more likely reported missing school than those who reported sufficient products (46.27% vs 22.49% respectively, p < 0.001). However, there was no statistically significant difference between the groups in number of days missed.
Provision of sanitary products is important but only one component of a comprehensive MHM response. Ongoing attention over the link between product access and absenteeism risks overlooking complex systemic and structural factors which can negatively impact the sexual and reproductive health of learners in the school context, and more broadly.
人们越来越关注东非和南非女孩和年轻女性的月经健康管理(MHM)需求,这与尊严有关,也与缺乏卫生产品和逃学之间的潜在联系有关。在南非,没有足够的证据来指导适当的国家应对措施。本研究探讨了女高中生获得现代卫生产品的程度,以及她们在南非豪登省学校环境中管理月经时面临的各种需求和挑战。
我们于 2018 年 6 月至 8 月期间在塞迪本格区的 10 所学校收集了混合方法数据。定性部分包括对 30 名女学生、8 名教育工作者和 9 名女学生的母亲进行深入访谈,以及对 7 名男学生和 10 名女学生进行焦点小组讨论。505 名女学生参加了定量部分,其中包括一项自我管理调查,重点关注与获得卫生产品相关的因素。
调查参与者的中位数年龄为 17 岁(四分位距为 16-18 岁),初潮平均年龄为 13.36 岁。在过去的 3 个月里,有 1/7 的女学生报告说没有足够的卫生用品来应对每个经期,而且这种情况在学校五分位数中都存在。女学生经历的与月经相关的挑战(身体不适、被嘲笑、上课时分心)之间存在复杂的相互作用,这些挑战常常被学校环境中的因素放大或加剧(不卫生的卫生设施和不足的休息区),并影响到她们的学业参与和出勤率。在过去的 3 个月里,有 1/7 的女学生报告说没有足够的产品来应对每个经期,与报告有足够产品的女生相比,这些女生更有可能缺课(分别为 46.27%和 22.49%,p<0.001)。然而,两组女生缺课的天数没有统计学上的显著差异。
提供卫生产品固然重要,但这只是全面 MHM 应对措施的一个组成部分。持续关注产品获取与缺勤之间的联系可能会忽视复杂的系统和结构性因素,这些因素可能会对学校环境中学习者的性健康和生殖健康产生负面影响,甚至更广泛。