A Qualitative Study Exploring Menstruation Experiences and Practices among Adolescent Girls Living in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement, Uganda
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Women and adolescent girls are using a clean menstrual management material to absorb or collect menstrual blood, that can be changed in privacy as often as necessary for the duration of a menstrual period, using soap and water for washing the body as required, and having access to safe and convenient facilities to dispose of used menstrual management materials. They understand the basic facts linked to the menstrual cycle and how to manage it with dignity and without discomfort or fear.”.[6]
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection
2.2. Data Analysis
2.3. Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. Social Context for Adolescent Girls in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement
3.1.1. Precarious Experiences
“I left there [Ethiopia] when it was 2003, when people fought. From Ethiopia we went away to [South] Sudan, then after the fight in 2013 in [South] Sudan, we came here in 2014.”(16 years old, Ethiopia)
“It was in October 2012; we were running away from the war in Congo. We then lost connections with my sister and we stayed in church there in Congo. In the morning, like at 4:00 am, we went to fetch water. We were like five ladies. We were attacked by thugs and they were many and stronger. They caught all of us and raped us. For me, by bad luck, I became pregnant and that’s how I got my first pregnancy.”(19 years old, DR Congo)
3.1.2. Family Separation
“I came in September, in 2015. As we were coming from Burundi up to here in Uganda, we got many problems because we didn’t know Uganda. Actually, we didn’t know where we were going, because we were running away from the war and we could not go back. We parted from our parents and lost communication… we had to run and come here. I came with my young siblings [three].”(19 years old, Burundi)
3.1.3. Scarcity of Resources for Livelihood
“Many people stay in one room. For example, we stay 10 people in one room. For example, we [sisters] stay with our mother in the same room. But my father sleeps in the other room for men.”(16 years old, South Sudan)
“…Also, food, sometimes they [NGOs or The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)] give you food for five people when we are like eleven.”(15 years old, South Sudan)
“I was given half sponsorship from the Windle Trust [NGO]. I also work for myself during the holidays and I pay my school fees by myself.”(17 years old, Burundi)
3.2. Menstruation and Its Management
3.2.1. Menstrual Experiences
First Menstrual Experience
“It [menstruation] was alike a miracle to me because I did not know anything about it.”(18 year old, Rwanda)
“When I was going to the latrine to ease myself, I found blood and after…I came and told her [older cousin] that something has bitten my buttocks. Then she said “no it’s not, it is the one”. Then I asked: “which one”? [smiles].(16 years old, Ethiopia)
Social Support from Family, Siblings, Peers and Teachers
“I live with my mum, but I feared to tell her.”(FGD, 18–19 years old)
“My first time I saw little drops of blood. I was scared and I shared with my mother. She then explained to me everything and asked me to let her know in case the blood continues to come, so that she provides for me what to use.”(19 years old, Burundi)
“I immediately went to the teacher and told her about the problems that I got from class. Also, my friends in class had to help me with a jacket, because blood passed through my uniform. After going to the teacher, she gave me a pad and asked me to put it on. And when I went home, I told my mother who explained to me more.”(17 years old, Somalia)
Limited Leisure, Exercise and Self-Isolation
School Absences
“I did not even have what to use… that made me fear to go to school so that my friends may not laugh at me in case blood leaks out of the dress.”(19 years old, DR Congo)
“All the days I have it, I don’t come to school. I fear it [the stain] to touch on my clothes that’s why I remain at home.”(15 years old, Somalia)
Psychological Effects
“I was shocked because I didn’t know that I will get menstruation period in that year. I was not old enough.”(18 years old, Somalia)
“I was scared of leaking because I was using torn clothes.”(19 years old, Burundi)
Physical Experiences
“I actually spent two weeks in menstruation periods. My friends told me that it was a problem, they have advised me to go to the nurse. I went and asked her…”(17 years old, Burundi)
“On menstrual dates I reach a point when I cannot even lower my foot down…the legs shake… when I step down, I feel a lot of pain. This makes me miss school.”(FGD, 13–17 years old)
“I sometimes miss exams because of periods, because as you know, I have already told you, that we in Somali culture, we do circumcise girls… And when they circumcise you, they leave a small space there for just urine…”(18 years old, Somalia)
3.2.2. Menstrual Hygiene Management (MHM) and Practices
Shortage of MHM Supplies
“I get a big piece of cloth and cut it into small pieces but not very small. And then I use it in the morning, at eleven I remove it, wash it and hung on the sunshine. In a day I can change like three times. That’s the way how I use those clothes.”(17 years old, Burundi)
Body Hygiene Practices
“I wash with soap and water. And after washing I put it on the rope, after getting dry, I get it and put it on again.”(14 years old, Ethiopia)
“As you know when we are in the menstruation periods and use dirty things, there we can get more diseases.”(19 years old, DR Congo)
Seeking Help: Health Care, Family, Friends and Teachers
“I asked my friend who was in primary seven, I asked her what to do and she referred me to the school nurse. The school nurse gave me pads and a new knicker.”(17 years old, Rwanda)
“My teachers taught me that when you are going to experience it, you go to the toilet and find when all the urine is full of blood.”(15 years old, South Sudan)
“Even now when I feel pain I do not go to the nurse because today I will have the medicine and tomorrow, I will not have it…”(FGD, 18–19 years old)
“I normally go to Kashozi hospital. It’s where I normally go and get my Panadol [Paracetamol] and they do give us.”(18 years old, Somalia)
“No! Because I didn’t know where to go. But if the health center was here I would have gone there then.”(18 years old, Burundi)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Categories | Topics | Subtopics |
---|---|---|
Social context for adolescent girls in the Nakivale refugee settlement | Precarious experiences | |
Family separation | ||
Scarcity of resources for livelihood | ||
Menstruation and its management | Menstrual experiences | First menstrual experience |
Social support from family, siblings, peers and teachers | ||
Limited leisure, exercise and self-isolation | ||
Psychological effect | ||
Physical experiences | ||
Menstrual hygiene management (MHM) and practices | Shortage of MHM supplies | |
Body hygiene practices | ||
Seeking help: healthcare, family, friends and teachers |
Age of the Participants | Number of Participants | Type of the Qualitative Method Used |
---|---|---|
13–17 years old girls | 9 | 1 FGD |
16 | 16 Semistructured interviews | |
18–19 years old girls | 10 | 1 FGD |
7 | 7 Semistructured interviews | |
Total number of participants | 42 |
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Share and Cite
Kemigisha, E.; Rai, M.; Mlahagwa, W.; Nyakato, V.N.; Ivanova, O. A Qualitative Study Exploring Menstruation Experiences and Practices among Adolescent Girls Living in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement, Uganda. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 6613. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17186613
Kemigisha E, Rai M, Mlahagwa W, Nyakato VN, Ivanova O. A Qualitative Study Exploring Menstruation Experiences and Practices among Adolescent Girls Living in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement, Uganda. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(18):6613. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17186613
Chicago/Turabian StyleKemigisha, Elizabeth, Masna Rai, Wendo Mlahagwa, Viola N. Nyakato, and Olena Ivanova. 2020. "A Qualitative Study Exploring Menstruation Experiences and Practices among Adolescent Girls Living in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement, Uganda" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 18: 6613. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17186613
APA StyleKemigisha, E., Rai, M., Mlahagwa, W., Nyakato, V. N., & Ivanova, O. (2020). A Qualitative Study Exploring Menstruation Experiences and Practices among Adolescent Girls Living in the Nakivale Refugee Settlement, Uganda. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(18), 6613. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17186613