The gap in menstrual health education is real — for menstruators and non-menstruators alike. Here's what the research actually says.
Menstrual health is one of the most under-discussed topics in healthcare — despite affecting roughly half the global population for a significant portion of their lives. The education gap isn't just cultural. It's structural.
Research consistently shows that the lack of formal menstrual health education — in schools, workplaces, and healthcare settings — leaves many people without the knowledge to manage their cycle, recognise symptoms that need attention, or advocate for their own care.
A 2026 cross-sectional study published in the International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health found that even among medical professionals, only 48.5% reported full awareness of proper menstrual product usage. The most commonly cited barriers: lack of a formal curriculum (51.5%) and social taboos (47.8%).
Source: IJCMPH, 2026 — Assessment of menstrual health product knowledge among medical professionals.
Period stigma isn't a relic of the past. It's an active barrier to health, education, and equity — and it operates at every level, from the classroom to the GP surgery.
A 2023 peer-reviewed review in PMC (The Persistent Power of Stigma) analysed 34 policy initiatives across four countries and found that misogyny, myths, and misinformation remain the primary drivers of menstrual stigma — and that education is the most widely recognised antidote, but remains underfunded and inconsistently implemented.
Young people learning about menstruation primarily from social media — without foundational knowledge — are particularly vulnerable. Research from Springer Nature (2024) highlights that without proper menstrual education, young people "start from a position of ignorance" and are unable to critically assess what they see online, often absorbing harmful misconceptions.
Studies in England and Northern Ireland consistently show that school RSE (Relationships and Sex Education) treats menstruation primarily as a precursor to pregnancy — rather than as a lifelong aspect of health. This framing leaves many without the tools to understand or communicate their own experiences. (Bowen-Viner et al., 2022; Critical Debates in Humanities, 2024)
Period stigma has measurable consequences. Research in France found that people experiencing period poverty were significantly more likely to report psychological symptoms — with 49.4% reporting at least one mental health symptom compared to those without period poverty. Shame and stigma compound the financial barrier. (PMC10372806, 2023)
Menstrual stigma doesn't only harm those who menstruate. When the people around them — partners, managers, teachers, colleagues — lack basic knowledge, it creates environments where asking for support, taking time off, or simply having a conversation feels impossible. (PMC12450248, 2025)
Misinformation about menstruation is widespread — among people who menstruate and those who don't. Here are some of the most common misconceptions, and what the evidence actually shows.
One of the most significant gaps in menstrual education is the lack of clear guidance on when symptoms require medical attention. Many people either dismiss serious symptoms as "normal" or feel embarrassed to raise them. Neither response is acceptable — and both are preventable with better education.
Seek medical advice if you experience any of the following:
These are not exhaustive lists, and individual circumstances vary. If something feels wrong, it's always right to ask. The NHS 111 service is available 24/7 for guidance.
Sources: NHS UK; Healthline; ICGI; Stony Brook Medicine; Mercy Medical Center.
Period poverty and menstrual stigma are not issues that affect one group in isolation. They shape workplaces, relationships, schools, and healthcare systems in ways that touch everyone.
Better education means earlier diagnosis of treatable conditions, reduced shame around a natural process, and the confidence to advocate for your own health. Endometriosis, for example, takes an average of 7–10 years to diagnose in the UK — largely because symptoms are normalised and dismissed. Knowledge is the first step to changing that.
(Endometriosis UK)
Partners, managers, teachers, and colleagues shape the environments in which people do or don't feel able to manage their health. Research shows that when men have better menstrual knowledge, they are more supportive, less likely to perpetuate stigma, and more likely to advocate for equitable policies. (PMC12450248, 2025)
1 in 2 people who menstruate have missed school, work, or social activities due to their period. Period poverty is linked to absenteeism, reduced educational attainment, and measurable mental health impacts. Addressing the knowledge and access gap isn't just a health issue — it's an economic and equity issue. (Plan International UK; PMC10372806)
Free access to period products is one piece of a larger puzzle. Normalising menstruation — through education, open conversation, and genuine access — is the work we're all part of.
Get Involved