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'Menstrual poverty': Brazil tampon row gets political

Nov 10, 2021, 9:42 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

Brazil 60 million women and girls have to make do with whatever means during their menstrual periods, because tampons and pads are way above their family budgets. This is because of the veto by President Bolsonaro of funding for free menstrual supply for Brazil’s poor.

Brazil, a country of 213 million people, has an estimated 60 million women and girls who get their period each month.

An estimated 28 percent of poor women suffer what is known as "menstrual poverty," meaning they are unable to afford basic hygiene products, reported AFP.

Forced by necessity, they have found myriad solutions to deal with their monthly periods: pieces of bread, cotton, paper or the "paninho" (little cloth), a piece of fabric that is washed and re-used.

But a lack of menstrual supplies keeps one in four girls home from school each month, according to a recent report by a United Nations Foundation program called Girl Up.

An example, Vanessa Moraes lives in a Rio de Janeiro slum, works multiple jobs to support her two sons and barely scrapes by on welfare.

So, buying tampons and pads each month is hardly a priority.

Like millions of women across Brazil, Moraes improvises with whatever she can when she gets her period -- a long-taboo topic that took a political turn last month when President Jair Bolsonaro vetoed legislation to provide free menstrual supplies for the poor.

‘Pads are expensive’

"Pads are expensive, so we use a piece of cloth, a pillowcase, a diaper, whatever we can," says Moraes, whose sons are aged 11 and 12.

Her eldest, Hugo, has cerebral palsy, and must wear diapers.

"Whenever one of my son's diapers breaks, I think, 'Oh, I'll use that for a pad,'" Moraes tells AFP.

The tall 39-year-old demonstrates her technique, tearing the elastic strips off each side of a diaper, opening the absorbent middle and adding a piece of scrap cloth to make it more effective.

Moraes lives in Complexo do Alemao, a sprawling "favela" on Rio's north side.

Much of her income from her jobs as a waitress and school-bus driver goes to caring for Hugo.

Even with the 1,100 reais ($200) she receives in government assistance each month, the family barely gets by, she says.

A pack of tampons or pads ranges in price from three to 10 reais in Brazil -- a sum Moraes simply can't afford.

'Matter of public health'

Moraes gets assistance from One by One, a local charity for impoverished disabled people and their families.

The organization provides equipment such as wheelchairs, food and basic goods -- including menstrual supplies.

Missing classes

Another beneficiary, Karla Cristina de Almeida, 15 years old, shares her monthly package with her sister -- when they can.

"Sometimes we have one pack, sometimes we have none. When we don't have any, I don't even leave the house. So I miss school," she says.

Women lined up at One by One's recent handout of menstrual supplies.

One, Miriam Firmino, 51, remembered coming of age using a "paninho" -- an experience she wants to spare her three daughters.

Waiting for sale of tampons

"To be able to afford tampons, we have to find them on sale. When we can't, we get by however we can," she says.

The problem has only grown worse with the coronavirus pandemic, whose economic fallout has hit hardest among the poor.

"With the pandemic and the economic crisis, a lot of the mothers we help tell us they've gone back to using 'paninhos,' paper, cotton or other materials when they menstruate," says One by One president Teresa Stengel.
"They often complain of injuries and infections. Menstrual poverty is a public health problem."

Bolsonaro veto

The issue became a topic of national conversation in October when Bolsonaro signed a bill into law promoting "menstrual health," but used his line-item veto to block its promise of free menstrual supplies for more than five million low-income women and girls, arguing there was no funding for it.

The move has fueled scathing criticism of the far-right president, who has often been accused of misogyny and anti-women policies.

In response, Rio city hall and several other state and local governments have started giving out free tampons in public schools.

"My school has done more for Brazil than Bolsonaro. They gave out three packs of tampons to every girl," quipped one Twitter user.

Tags: #Brazil, #Bolsonaro, #tamponsandpads, #womenandgirls, #publichealth


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