Type | Journal Article - Population Services International Nepal |
Title | Menstrual Health and Hygiene Management in Nepal |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
URL | http://menstrualhygieneday.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/PSI_Scoping-Review-and-Preliminary-Mapping-of-Menstrual-Health-in-Nepal-Final.pdf |
Abstract | Menstruation signals a girl’s entry into womanhood, sexual activity, and reproduction and as such, is a crucial time for adolescent girls to learn about their bodies and their health. Yet effective solutions to improve menstrual healthi are lacking, as evidenced by girls’ lack of knowledge and unhealthy practices. In Nepal, less than half of adolescent girls have adequate knowledge about menstruation, and only one in ten practices good menstrual hygiene.ii Adolescent girls’ inability to effectively manage menstrual hygiene affects their education, physical health, psychological and emotional well-being, and general quality of life. Adolescent girls in Nepal face many sexual and reproductive health problems and challenges, amidst gender disparity and other discriminatory social norms in Nepali society. Child marriage is legally prohibited, yet one in four girls is married before the age of 19. The median age at first marriage is 17 years. The adolescent fertility rate is 71 per 1,000 women aged 15-19 years with wider differences in urban and rural settings (33% in urban and 80% in rural).iii During menstruation, a majority of girls (89%) also experienced some form of restrictions or exclusion.iv One extreme form of menstrual seclusion practice is called Chhaupadi, a common social tradition in the far and mid-western hills and mountains that requires menstruating women to leave home and live in a chhau goth (cowshed or hut). Menstrual restrictions and traditional beliefs vary by ethnicity; for example, Hindu ethnic groups such as Brahmin, Chhetri, and Newar, have more restrictions than Janajatis (ethnic Nepalis). |
» | Nepal - Population and Housing Census 2011 |