About the report from Plan International :
Plan International conducted a survey among boys and men in the Netherlands, Brazil, Indonesia and Uganda and attitudes to menstruation.
The report states, among other things, that 1 in 3 believe that menstruation should be kept secret. More than half of the respondents believe that menstruation is dirty. Nearly 40% think menstruation is disgusting. Almost 20% think it is embarrassing for girls and women to be seen with bandages and tampons. Only one in five (22%) say that they are very well informed about their period.
More than 4,000 men responded to the survey. About 1000 from each of the countries.
The survey was conducted in the first week of April 2022.
About the report from Care:
The survey was conducted in May 2022.
1,000 men and women over the age of 16 responded to the survey.
Those who responded to the survey live in Oslo and Viken, Innlandet, Vestlandet, Agder and Sør-Østlandet, Trøndelag and Northern Norway.
More than half of Norwegian women are ashamed when they get their period for the first time. Furthermore, the survey also shows that as many as 43 percent have felt more dirty during the period they are menstruating, compared to when they are not. As many as 67 percent have been worried that others will see stains on clothes, and 45 percent have been worried that others will experience odors as a result of menstruation.
Nine percent of men thought it was embarrassing to talk about menstruation, and only seven percent thought girls / women complained too much about menstruation. In fact, around a third of men think that there is too much taboo around menstruation in Norway, and 24 percent think girls / women are ashamed to have menstruation.
Founded in 1945, CARE is one of the world’s largest aid organizations, operating in 102 countries.
–sea view
– Sick
According to the survey from Care, only 37 percent of Norwegian men know how women ’s bodies work when they are menstruating.
– Sick.
Gunhild Gjøsund Kleppen (17) says this when VG tells her about the new report.
She is a youth counselor at the Youth Rights Body in Plan International Norway (URO).
There she works especially with girls’ and women ’s rights.
– I think it is still a long way to go, it is taboo to talk about it. Many people think it is disgusting and that menstruation is disgusting, says Gjøsund Kleppen.
She notices that there is more openness and that it is moving forward, but there is still a lot of work left.
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INFORMATION: Gunhild Gjøsund Kleppen believes that sex education should be better and be a larger part of the curriculum. Photo: Private
Among other things, she believes that sex education in schools can be improved.
– It is very typical that the teachers are not comfortable talking about it themselves, and it affects the kids. That’s incredibly stupid. And that it is such a small part of the curriculum is also stupid, she says.
Saturday is International Menstruation Day. Then Gjøsund Kleppen and the gang in URO will have a tampon march in Karl Johans gate in Oslo.
– We will inform about these problems, what people do not know they do not know, she says.
Gjøstad Kleppen also believes that Norway should lead by example, as Lende in Care believes.
In countries further south in the world , the situation is completely different.
Will keep your period a secret
A recent report from Plan International shows that more than half of men in the countries of the Netherlands, Brazil, Indonesia and Uganda think their period is dirty.
1 in 3 thinks menstruation should be kept secret.
– It is serious because it has a number of consequences. One thing is that women may find it difficult, but it also leads to a lot of girls losing school due to menstruation, says Kari Helene Partapuoli.
She is Secretary General of Plan International Norway.
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STIGMA: There are still many negative attitudes associated with menstruation. Secretary General of Plan International Norway, Kari Helene Partapuoli, does not believe any country has reached the goal of breaking the taboo around menstruation. Photo: Astrid Hexeberg / Plan International Norway
The joint survey shows that 40 percent of men in these countries think menstruation is disgusting.
Only 22 percent answer that they are well informed about menstruation and what it entails.
– It is important to hear what men think about this. It shows that there is still a lot of stigma and taboo around menstruation, says Partapuoli.
But it is not completely dark. Many want to learn more and understand.
– The majority say that they want to normalize it and they want to know more through, for example, better sexuality education in school, says Partapuoli.
She concludes by saying that taboos around menstruation must be worked on everywhere.
– I do not think there is any place we have reached the finish line, she says.
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