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As part of the International Women’s Day celebrations, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the American-Lao Business Association (ALBA), together with partners, organised “Pads for Progress: Her Days”, a special event to promote menstrual health and education, and to support girls to remain in school with dignity and confidence.

The event drew attention to the challenges many girls face during menstruation and highlighted the importance of collective action to address menstrual poverty.
Held under the message “Support Menstrual Health & Education – Help Girls Stay in School!”, the event combined inspiring talks, the collection of pad donations, and interactive activities to raise awareness and mobilise support for girls and women in vulnerable communities. The initiative also encouraged open and respectful dialogue around menstruation, privacy, health, and the role of families, schools, healthcare providers, businesses, and communities in ensuring that no girl is left behind.
Menstrual health is not only a health issue; it is closely linked to education, dignity, confidence, and equal opportunity. When girls lack access to menstrual products, accurate information, safe sanitation, and supportive environments, their ability to learn, participate, and thrive is affected. By addressing these barriers, Lao PDR can help create conditions in which girls can remain in school and realise their full potential.
The event also echoed a critical message featured in the campaign materials: nearly one in ten girls in Laos miss school or other daily activities during their period. This reality underscores the urgent need for stronger awareness, improved access to menstrual supplies, and a greater collective commitment to menstrual health as a matter of rights, inclusion, and development.
Dr Bakhtiyor Kadyrov, UNFPA Representative in the Lao PDR, said: “Menstrual health is not a marginal issue; it is a strategic investment in human dignity, gender equality, education, and the full participation of girls and women in society. When a girl misses school because she lacks the support, information, or supplies to manage her period safely and with dignity, we are not only failing her, we are limiting the country’s potential. Through this partnership with ALBA, we are joining efforts to break the silence, challenge stigma, and advance practical solutions so that every girl and woman can thrive, contribute, and claim her rights.”
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“ALBA is proud to stand with UNFPA and partners to support girls and women through this important initiative. Menstrual health should never be a barrier to education or opportunity. The private sector has a meaningful role to play in advancing dignity, awareness, and practical support for communities, and we are committed to being part of that effort,” said Jacqueline Spence, President of ALBA.
“Every registration for today’s event will help purchase one menstrual kit. All the kits will be distributed to vulnerable girls in the coming weeks. We call on all partners to join us and contribute beyond today’s event,” she added.
Through this collaboration, UNFPA and ALBA reaffirm their shared commitment to advancing the rights of women and girls, and to building partnerships that respond to real needs in communities. The event demonstrated how joint action can help challenge harmful taboos, promote menstrual health literacy, and provide practical support that enables girls to continue their education.
UNFPA remains committed to working with government, civil society, communities, and the private sector to ensure that girls and women in the Lao PDR can manage menstruation safely, confidently, and with dignity.
KPL