Menstruation Knowledge, Stigmatization and Support Perception of Adolescent Boys in a Rural Secondary School in Benue State, Nigeria
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47672/ejhs.2439Keywords:
Adolescent Boys, Menstruation Knowledge, Stigmatization, Support Perception, Rural Secondary School, Benue State, NigeriaAbstract
Purpose: To assess menstruation knowledge and stigmatization and support the perception of adolescent boys in a rural secondary school.
Materials and Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study of 121 secondary school boys drawn from all classes using a simple random sampling technique. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to collect data on socio-demographic characteristics, knowledge, and perception of menstruation.
Findings: Most of the respondents, 55.4 % were aged between 15-18 years. Those in their fourth-year class (SS1) were more (40.5%). Some felt that menstruation was a disease (13.4%), contagious (24%), and unclean (29.8%). Those with correct knowledge of menarche were 97.5%. Those willing to obtain more knowledge on menstruation were 79.3%. More than half, 57% were unwilling to share food, items, and bedrooms with a menstruating female and 38.8 % believed that women should observe restrictions during their period. Those willing to offer support were 47.9% which was the highest and no support 1.7%. Teasing of girls in their period was reported by 20.6% of the respondents.
Implications to Theory, Practice and Policy: There was good knowledge of menarche. However, misconceptions about menstruation and teasing were observed. This study contributes to theory by exploring boys' perceptions of menstruation and linking their misinformation to menstrual stigma. Practically, it emphasizes the need for educational programs, awareness campaigns, and peer support systems to reduce stigma and improve understanding. On a policy level, it advocates for menstrual education in school curricula, gender equality in health education, and policies addressing cultural misconceptions around adolescent reproductive health. More health education on menstruation needs to be given to secondary school boys.
Downloads
References
Kettaneh A, Pulizzi S, Todesco M. Puberty education and menstrual hygiene management. UNESCO. 2020; 1–59.
Robinson H. Chaupadi: the affliction of menses in Nepal. Int J Womens Dermatol. 2015;1(4):193–4.
Edet O.B., Bassey, P.E, Esienumoh E.E, Ndep, A.O. Attitudes, beliefs and perception of menstruation-related sociocultural practices and menstrual hygiene Management among in-school Adolescent girls in Cross River State, Nigeria. Afr. J. Biomed. Res2021:24; 363- 369.
Nnennaya EU, Atinge S, Dogara SP, Ubandoma RJ. Menstrual hygiene management among adolescent school girls in Taraba State, Nigeria. Afr Health Sci. 2021 Jun;21(2):842-851
Thakuri DS, Thapa RK, Singh S, Khanal GN, Khatri RB. A harmful religio-cultural practice (Chhaupadi) during menstruation among adolescent girls in Nepal: Prevalence and policies for eradication. PLoS One. 202;16(9):1-22
Mohammed SE, Larsen-Reindorf R. Menstrual knowledge, sociocultural restrictions, and barriers to menstrual hygiene management in Ghana: evidence from a multi-method survey among adolescent schoolgirls and schoolboys. PLoS One 2020;15(10):1–19.
Benshaul-Tolonen A, Aguilar-Gomez S, Batzer NH, Cai R, Nyanza E C (2020). Period teasing, stigma and knowledge: a survey of adolescent boys and girls in Northern Tanzania. PLoS One.2020; 15(10):1–21.
Sommer M, Hirsch JS, Nathanson C, Parker RG. Comfortably, safely, and without shame: defining menstrual hygiene management as a public health issue. Am J Public Health. 2015;105(7):1302–11
Coast E, Lattof SR, Strong J. Puberty and menstruation knowledge among young adolescents in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review. Intern J Public Heal.2019; 64(2):293–304.
Holmes K, Curry C, Ferfolja S T, Kelly P, Smith C, Hyman H, et al. Adolescent menstrual health literacy in low, middle and high-income countries: a narrative review. Int J Environ Res Public Health.2021;18(5):1–14.
House S, Mahon T, Cavill S. Menstrual hygiene matters: a resource for improving menstrual hygiene around the world. Reprod Health Matters.2012; 21(41):257–9.
Mahon T, Tripathy A, Singh N. Putting the men into menstruation: the role of men and boys in community menstrual hygiene management. Waterlines.2015 34(1):7–14.
West, A. (2015). A brief review of cognitive theoriesin gender development. Behavioural Sciences Undergraduate Journal, 2(1), 59-66
Cheng YT, Hayter M, Mei-Ling L (2012). Pubescent male students’ attitudes towards menstruation in Taiwan: implications for reproductive health education and school nursing practice. J Clin Nurs.2012; 21(3–4):513–521.
Sahay DN. Myths and misconceptions about menstruation: a study of adolescent school girls of Delhi. J Womens’ Heal Dev. 2020;03(03):154–169.
Tal, C. Period drama: how Asian women broke the menstruation taboo, 2019 Retrieved from https://www.scmp.com/weekasia/society/article/3005765/menstrual-misconceptions-how-asianattitudes-towards-periods-are August 12/9 2024).
Daniela B ED, Gass T. Knowledge, attitudes and practices concerning Menstrual Hygiene Management (MHM) of adolescents in rural primary schools in Malawi IsGlobal, Barcelona Institute for Global Health. In: Master of Global Health 2015-2018.2015;1- 65.
UNICEF. Menstrual hygiene (2022). Available from: https://www.unicef.org/wash/menstrual-hygiene accessed on 3/3/2024
Haver J, Long JL . Operational guidelines on menstrual hygiene management- Save the Children. Save Child. 2011. Available at https://www.savethechildren.org/content/dam/global/reports/health-and-nutrition/mens-hyg-mgmt-guide.pdf Accessed on 20/3/2023
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 L.T. Swende, M. I. Oseji, A. N Akwaras, T. Z Swende, B.O. Ornguga, C.U. Ugboaja, J. Egbiri
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.