Pereda Damaris, Mahuna Sasha
Portland, OR.
Kailua, Hawaii.
NASN Sch Nurse. 2025 Jan;40(1):38-45. doi: 10.1177/1942602X241268540. Epub 2024 Sep 20.
Lack of access to menstrual products, menstrual hygiene, and education, also known as period poverty, is a widespread issue and disproportionately impacts low-income, rural, Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and People of Color. Period poverty along with period symptoms, such as heavy and painful periods, contribute to school absenteeism impacting school connectedness and student success. The purpose of this article is to bring awareness to period poverty and encourage school nurses to intervene in individual schools, communities, and far-reaching policy spaces utilizing their expertise to secure resources. School nurses can assist in implementing interventions throughout the school year to increase student engagement, success, and overall menstrual health wellness. Through added engagement of stakeholders such as student groups, school staff and administrators, and community organizations, school nurses can help shift the narrative from a position of oppression around menstrual health to a position of empowerment.
无法获得经期用品、经期卫生用品和教育,也就是所谓的经期贫困,是一个普遍存在的问题,对低收入、农村、黑人、拉丁裔、原住民和有色人种产生了不成比例的影响。经期贫困以及诸如月经量过多和痛经等经期症状,会导致学生缺课,影响学生与学校的联系以及学业成就。本文旨在提高人们对经期贫困的认识,并鼓励学校护士利用他们的专业知识,在各个学校、社区和广泛的政策领域进行干预,以获取资源。学校护士可以协助在整个学年实施干预措施,以提高学生的参与度、学业成就和整体经期健康水平。通过增加学生团体、学校工作人员和管理人员以及社区组织等利益相关者的参与,学校护士可以帮助将关于经期健康的叙述从压迫立场转变为赋权立场。