The deep divide between governmental health policies on menstrual hygiene and the reality on the ground during the pandemic.
It can be largely argued that concerted efforts towards battling the unseen global foe have been rewarding. Vaccines at record times are a milestone in taming a pandemic that has led to many lives being lost or irrevocably altered. With a virus death toll of over 2.1 million according to Johns Hopkins University and Medicine, Coronavirus Resource Center, COVID-19 is proving to be our collective reality bringing the global community together in unprecedented ways through shared tragedy and trauma. While governments continue to focus on measures to respond effectively to emerging health gaps, one of the visible effects of the pandemic are deeply divided nations over issues of public health policy.
Progress in menstrual policy-formulation
Nonetheless, menstruation gained traction among decision makers involved in menstrual policy-formulation, innovation and engagement in 2020, demonstrating unequivocal efforts that resound ‘periods do not stop for pandemics’. The year 2020 was monumental in the menstrual health and hygiene space globally with the government of Kenya through the Ministry of Health launching the Menstrual Hygiene Management (MHM) Policy and Strategy amid COVID-19. Policy dissemination at sub-national government level has already started and the multi-sectoral approach in executing MHM activities has been boosted through coordinated response strengthened by the policy. Notably, in November Members of the Scottish Parliament unanimously approved the Period Products Free Provision Bill, making it a legal duty for local authorities to ensure free menstrual materials to anyone in need.
Affordability of sanitary pads
In 2007, Kenya reportedly scrapped tax on sanitary products to make them affordable to many girls and women who could not afford them. Close to a decade later, a study by Menstrual Hygiene Day in 2016 revealed that 65 percent of Kenyan girls and women cannot afford a sanitary pad. The government said it would provide all school-going girls with free sanitary pads after an amendment to the Education Act was signed into law in 2017. Even before the pandemic, a statement released in September 2019 showed that the government was experiencing bottlenecks distributing sanitary pads to four million girls, forcing some to drop out of school or even get married - potentially increasing cases of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) including HIV. The government through the Public Service and Gender Affairs ministry said that sanitary pads worth Kshs 460 Million (approximately USD 4.2 Million) were issued to 3.7 million girls in public primary, secondary and special schools in the 2017-18 financial year admitting that “there were challenges because the money was not adequate”. Globally, organisations such as Sanitation and Water for All (SWA) are at the forefront of rallying finance ministers and other heads of governments to invest and make financial commitments within a sector highly underfunded and marred with corruption through Mutual Accountability Mechanisms.
Risks of rolling back gains
Undoubtedly, Kenya's health sector, especially sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), has been hit hard by the absence of learners in schools, medics on strike and a global pandemic that has worsened an already fragile situation. Education officials and stakeholders have warned that only 75 percent of registered pupils and students have reported back to school since opening on January 4, 2021 after a 10-month closure due to COVID. Where are the rest of the learners? How many are teenage mothers and just how much is being done to relieve their plight?
The sector, has not only experienced a surge in teenage pregnancy numbers consequently registering a drastic rise of teenage mothers countrywide, but also the potential risk of rolling back gains made over the years curbing harmful cultural practices like child marriage and Female Genital Mutilation (FGM).