There are more than 300 million women and girls worldwide who experience their periods on a given day, according to the World Bank, but "menstruating individuals (including women, girls, and others) need to have access to age-appropriate information and education about their menstrual cycle, alongside support during life-course changes."
That's why the UN's children's agency, Unicef, has launched a campaign to end "period poverty," which is "the lack of access to sanitary products due to financial as well as knowledge constraints," per a press release.
In Bangladesh, for example, more than 50% of adolescent girls between the ages of 10 and 19 use old cloth for their periods, while 64% of women aged 20-49 use unhygienic products, according to the country's National Hygiene Survey 2018.
"They do not know that the use of unhygienic products increases the possibility of infection," says the press release.
The campaign, dubbed "We Don't Need to Worry About Our Periods," aims to end period poverty by 2030, the BBC reports.
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