Missouri is making period products free in schools as research shows great need

Photo by Anna Shvets

 

St. Louis Public Radio: Missouri school districts are now offering free menstrual hygiene products to students thanks to a new source of state funding.

The program is beginning as school nurses across the state report a serious need for products to help their students manage their periods. A new survey found a majority of nurses say they have students who have missed school because of their periods and have students who struggle to afford products such as tampons and pads. The research was conducted by St. Louis University associate professor Anne Sebert Kuhlmann and published in the Journal of School Health.

This research shows difficulty managing menstruation is affecting students’ education across the state, regardless of location or demographic differences in districts. Nurses from almost all Missouri counties responded to the survey, representing two out of three public school districts in the state.
“It's not just in the urban core areas, but despite differences in district characteristics, nurses in pretty much all of the districts that responded were reporting some of these same issues,” Sebert Kuhlmann said.

Missouri’s Department of Elementary and Secondary Education has $1 million to reimburse schools for menstrual hygiene products. Bart Washer, Interim Assistant Commissioner with the Office of College and Career Readiness, said schools have some flexibility in what they can provide for their students, from tampons and pads to reusable menstrual cups and underwear.

“We have heard stories about students not being able to fund these products for themselves,” Washer said. “The fact that they can stay in school because they now have access to products that they need, we can focus on that level of care to help them continue learning.”

Sebert Kuhlmann’s latest research built on previous work that examined menstrual hygiene needs in the Jennings School District in St. Louis. There, almost two thirds of students surveyed said at least once in the 2019-2020 school year they needed period products but couldn’t afford them.