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  • Masih Babagoli
    Columbia University, New York
  • Anja Benshaul-Tolonen
    Columbia University, New York
  • Garazi Zulaika
    Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
  • Elizabeth Nyothach
    Kenya Medical Research Institute
  • Clifford Oduor
    Kenya Medical Research Institute
  • David Obor
    Kenya Medical Research Institute
  • Linda Mason
    Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
  • Emily Kerubo
    Kenya Medical Research Institute
  • Isaac Ngere
    Ministry of Health, Siaya County
  • Kayla Laserson
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA
  • Rhiannon Tudor Edwards
  • Penelope Phillips-Howard
    Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
Objective: To analyze the relative value of providing menstrual cups and sanitary pads to primary schoolgirls.

Design: Cost-effectiveness and cost–benefit analyses of three-arm single-site open cluster randomized controlled pilot study providing menstrual cups or sanitary pads for 1 year.

Participants: Girls 14–16 years of age enrolled across 30 primary schools in rural western Kenya.

Methods: Cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted based on the health effects (reductions in disability-adjusted life years [DALYs]) and education effects (reductions in school absenteeism) of both interventions. The health and education benefits were separately valued and compared with relative program costs.

Results: Compared with the control group, the cost of menstrual cups was estimated at $3,270 per year for 1000 girls, compared with $24,000 for sanitary pads. The benefit of the menstrual cup program (1.4 DALYs averted, 95% confidence interval [CI]: −4.3 to 3.1) was higher compared with a sanitary pad program (0.48 DALYs averted, 95% CI: −4.2 to 2.3), but the health effects of both interventions were not statistically significant likely due to the limited statistical power. Using point estimates, the menstrual cup intervention was cost-effective in improving health outcomes ($2,300/DALY averted). The sanitary pad intervention had a cost-effectiveness of $300/student-school year in reducing school absenteeism. When considering improvements in future earnings from reduced absenteeism, the sanitary pad program had a net benefit of +$68,000 (95% CI: −$32,000 to +$169,000).

Conclusions: The menstrual cup may provide a cost-effective solution for menstrual hygiene management in low-income settings. This study outlines a methodology for future analyses of menstrual hygiene interventions and highlights several knowledge gaps that need to be addressed. Trial registration: ISRCTN17486946.

Keywords

  • adolescence, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Cost-effectiveness analysis, menstrual cup, menstrual health, randomized trial, sanitary pads
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)773-784
Number of pages12
JournalWomen's Health Reports
Volume3
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Sept 2022

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