Throughout the 20th century, the marketing and design of menstrual products often stigmatized menstruation as an unmentionable bodily affliction. Menstruation was wrapped in euphemism: that time of the month, a weakness, a nuisance. “Feminine hygiene” products offered sanitation, invisibility, and freedom—but at what cost? Out for Blood: Feminine Hygiene to Menstrual Equity shows how marketing and social norms around menstruation create a cultural construct with power to shape people’s lives.
Menstrual Equity — Laurier Students' Public Interest Research Group
Heavy flow: How many pads a day is normal on your period?
Gynecologists Say Ibuprofen Can Lessen Menstrual Flow
Janell L. Carroll, PhD, ACC on LinkedIn: #uhart #periodpoverty #research #dorothygoodwinscholar #genderequity…
Out for Blood State University of New York Press
Endometriosis period blood: Color, clots, appearance, and more
Chris Bobel on X: If you missed the 🔥 panel that opened the @RadInstitute exhibit Out for Blood: Feminine Hygiene to Menstrual Equity--here's the recording. Tune in and listen to @nadyaokamoto
Janell L. Carroll, PhD, ACC on LinkedIn: #coactivecoaching #internationalcoachingfederation #lifecoaching #goals2021
Harvard Club of Alabama