Periods, Power, and Participation:

In This Article

Why Menstrual Health Is a Community Issue

Periods Are Not a Private Problem

Menstrual health affects education, work, and dignity - yet it’s still treated as a personal issue.

The Reality of Menstrual Inequality

According to NFHS-5:

  • Only 77% of Indian women use hygienic menstrual methods
  • School absenteeism rises sharply during menstruation

This isn’t biology - it’s access failure.

Why Silence Hurts Entire Communities

When menstruation is hidden:

  • Girls miss school
  • Infections go untreated
  • Women lose workdays

Silence leads to exclusion.

Menstrual Health as Participation

Access to sanitary pads enables:

  • Continuous education
  • Workforce participation
  • Confidence in public spaces

Snehdhara’s pad distribution and awareness sessions address both material access and stigma.

Education Matters as Much as Distribution

Pads without information don’t solve the problem. Community conversations:

  • Break myths
  • Encourage healthcare access
  • Build long-term behavioural change

What Communities Can Do Better

  • Normalise conversations
  • Involve men and boys
  • Support grassroots initiatives

Conclusion

Dignity Is Collective

Menstrual health isn’t a “women’s issue.” It’s about equality, participation, and dignity.

Support Snehdhara’s menstrual health initiatives and help communities move forward - together.

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