Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
Health

B.C. aims to expand access to menstrual products

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2022 01:47 PM
  • B.C. aims to expand access to menstrual products

BURNABY, B.C. - The British Columbia government says it is providing $750,000 to expand access to free menstrual products for people who need them and to help the United Way establish a task force to consider how to end "period poverty."

Nicholas Simons, the minister of social development and poverty reduction, says half of the people who menstruate in B.C. have struggled to buy the products they need at some point in their lives.

He told a Friday news conference that no one should have to stay home from work or school or choose between hygiene and essentials like food.

Asked about earlier calls for the province to make menstrual products available at locations such as schools, workplaces, pharmacies and government offices, Simons says there's a big difference between having the products available at home and having to access them in public spaces.

He says previous research has shown that limited access to menstrual products means people are likely to stay at home, and the task force will look at where the most effective locations might be to make products available.

Neal Adolph with the United Way says half of the funding that's intended to last for two years will go to the task force and the other half will support the organization's work to increase access to menstrual products across B.C.

The period poverty task force is due to provide a final report in March 2024.

The task force will be chaired by Nikki Hill, who has previously worked on a provincially funded research project with the United Way looking at the impacts a lack of access to menstrual products can have on a person's life.

"Before we started some of this work, we had no idea what a common problem it was for people in our communities," Hill told the news conference.

The task force will look at creating equity for those people, she says.

Students have had access to free menstrual products in the washrooms of B.C. public schools since 2019, the Ministry of Social Development says.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them
Even though fewer U.S. teens are smoking, secondhand smoke remains a big problem for them, a government study found.

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries
The pediatric surgeons hover over a tiny heart, gently retracting delicate inner structures and attaching a graft with impossibly intricate stitches to repair a congenital defect that would mean certain death within days of birth.

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls
Nearly every girl and woman on Earth carries two X chromosomes in each of her cells -- but one of them does (mostly) nothing. Do you know why?

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia
A scientific paper released on January 6, provides the first published evidence that a European variant of infectious salmon anaemia virus (ISAV) is present in British Columbia, Canada. 

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk
British health officials say drinking any alcohol regularly increases the risk of cancer, and have issued tough new guidelines that could be hard to swallow in a nation where having a pint is a hallowed tradition.

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk

New Airline Passenger Vetting Could Amount To Racial Profiling: Watchdog

New Airline Passenger Vetting Could Amount To Racial Profiling: Watchdog
The federal border agency's new system for scrutinizing incoming air passengers could open the door to profiling based on race or other personal factors, warns Canada's privacy czar.

New Airline Passenger Vetting Could Amount To Racial Profiling: Watchdog