School of Economics and Finance, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa.
School of Economics, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7701, South Africa.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Mar 4;18(5):2571. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18052571.
Menstrual hygiene management and health is increasingly gaining policy importance in a bid to promote dignity, gender equality and reproductive health. Effective and adequate menstrual hygiene management requires women and girls to have access to their menstrual health materials and products of choice, but also extends into having private, clean and safe spaces for using these materials. The paper provides empirical evidence of the inequality in menstrual hygiene management in Kinshasa (DRC), Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Rajasthan (India), Indonesia, Nigeria and Uganda using concentration indices and decomposition methods. There is consistent evidence of wealth-related inequality in the conditions of menstrual hygiene management spaces as well as access to sanitary pads across all countries. Wealth, education, the rural-urban divide and infrastructural limitations of the household are major contributors to these inequalities. While wealth is identified as one of the key drivers of unequal access to menstrual hygiene management, other socio-economic, environmental and household factors require urgent policy attention. This specifically includes the lack of safe MHM spaces which threaten the health and dignity of women and girls.
经期卫生管理和健康越来越受到重视,以促进尊严、性别平等和生殖健康。有效的和充分的经期卫生管理需要妇女和女孩能够获得她们选择的经期卫生用品和产品,但也需要有私人、干净和安全的空间来使用这些材料。本文使用集中指数和分解方法,提供了金沙萨(刚果民主共和国)、埃塞俄比亚、加纳、肯尼亚、拉贾斯坦邦(印度)、印度尼西亚、尼日利亚和乌干达在经期卫生管理方面不平等的实证证据。所有国家都有一致的证据表明,在经期卫生管理空间条件以及卫生巾获取方面存在与财富相关的不平等。财富、教育、城乡差距以及家庭基础设施的限制是造成这些不平等的主要因素。虽然财富被认为是获得经期卫生管理不平等的主要驱动因素之一,但其他社会经济、环境和家庭因素需要引起政策的紧急关注。这特别包括缺乏安全的 MHM 空间,这威胁到妇女和女孩的健康和尊严。