KUMJ | VOL. 22 | NO. 4 | ISSUE 88 | OCTOBER. - DECEMBER. 2024
Menstrual Hygiene Management among Nepalese Adolescent Schoolgirls: Results from a cross-sectional study
Shrestha A, Shrestha S, Koirala S, Subedi P, Tiwari D, Karmacharya BM
Abstract: Background
Adolescent schoolgirls in Nepal lack adequate support to manage menstruation.
Little studies have been conducted to date to learn how menstruation affects daily
lives of adolescents and how they were managing it. Menstruation also comes costly
in rural Nepal and the majority of them do not have capacity to afford menstrual
products due to high price.
Objective
The main objective of this study is to assess about menstrual challenges among
adolescent girls of rural Nepal.
Method
We deployed descriptive, cross-sectional study to analyze adolescent girls’ experience
of menstruation from purposively selected schools in Kavre and Sindhupalanchowk
districts of rural Nepal. The data was collected from May to July 2024 among
adolescent girls using semi-structured questionnaire of grade 8 and 9. The
adolescents were questioned regarding their own experiences with menstruation.
The interview included household related information, water, sanitation and hygiene
practices, self-menstruation practices and management, challenges they had been
facing, and sociocultural taboos about menstruation.
Result
All schools included in this study were government schools. 38% of an adolescents
reported of starting their menstruation at an age of 12 years. 39% of the respondents
reported of having an ability to challenge the existing social taboos relating to
menstruation. Above 60% uses sanitary pads as a menstrual product and for the
disposal of these products, 50% respondents reported of throwing them in the
dustbin followed by burying (21%) and burning (16%). And 10% of the respondents
reported of throwing the used menstrual products into Indrawati river. Majority of
respondents reported of not being able to visit temples and performing any religious
visits during menstruation and the main reasons behind was family prohibition and
fear of divine retribution.
Conclusion
Access to management materials of menstruation is problematic in the surveyed
schools especially in the rural areas where almost half of the girls do not have
access to sanitary pads and they resort to the use of cloth. Lack of affordability
for purchasing sanitary napkins were the most crucial predictors of menstrual
hygiene management. The Government of Nepal should take an initiative to provide
schoolgirls with sanitary pads in order to improve menstrual hygiene management in
all across schools within Nepal, particularly in rural areas.
Keyword : Menstruation, Menstrual hygiene management, Sanitary napkins