Drivers and challenges to use of menstrual cups among schoolgirls in rural Uganda: a qualitative study
Maria Hyttel | Camilla Faldt Thomsen | Bianca Luff | Halvor Storrusten | Viola Nilah Nyakato | Marianne Tellier
Is the menstrual cup a potential solution to address the challenges surrounding menstrual health and management (MHM) for girls and women in low-income contexts? This qualitative study assessed the drivers and challenges for acceptability of the menstrual cup (MC) among schoolgirls in rural Uganda. The study included 36 schoolgirls aged 13–17 recruited from a school-based controlled trial of MCs with 194 participants. After 4 months, 12 follow-up interviews and four focus group discussions were held with study participants After an initial learning curve the findings indicate that MCs are acceptable among schoolgirls in rural Uganda and suggest that the MC can be an acceptable, sustainable, and environmentally friendly MHM method for girls and women in similar contexts. Most (34 out of 36) participants overcame initial challenges mastering the techniques for insertion and removal and adapted to MC use. The main challenge for following the guidelines for hygienic use was finding equipment to boil the cup for disinfection. Major drivers for acceptability were creating trust in the MC and peer support as well as increased comfort, independence, and mobility due to reduced leakage compared with previous MHM methods, especially when in school.Abboud, S., Jemmott L.S. and Sommers M.S. (2015) ‘We are Arabs: the embodiment of virginity through Arab and Arab American women’s lived experiences’, Sexuality & Culture 19(4): 715–36 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12119-015-9286-1>.
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