National Coordinator of the CSOs Platform on SDGs, Levlyn Konadu Asiedu
In commemoration of World Menstrual Hygiene Day on May 28, 2025, Levlyn Konadu Asiedu, National Coordinator of the CSOs Platform on SDGs, has called on parents to take an active role in educating their children, especially girls, about menstrual hygiene and self-care.
“Teach them how to keep themselves clean and educate them about menstrual hygiene,” she emphasised, highlighting the importance of parental guidance over peer-led misinformation.
“What makes a lady a lady is when she begins menstruating, but most often, we hide this from our children. And when we hide such things from our children, their friends will teach them,” she added.
Her call came during a one-day Training Workshop and Field Visit on Menstrual Health and Hygiene organised by the CSOs Platform on SDGs in Accra on May 29, 2025.
The workshop aimed to enhance the capacity of journalists to advocate more effectively for menstrual hygiene and access to affordable sanitary products.
Archibald Adams, Communications Lead at Oxfam in Ghana, a member organisation of the CSOs Platform on SDGs, noted that the workshop was part of broader efforts to make menstrual health a mainstream conversation in Ghana.
“The purpose of the training was to equip journalists to improve their advocacy for menstrual hygiene. It is in connection with World Menstrual Hygiene Day, which is celebrated on May 28, 2025,” Adams said.
“And this year’s theme is ‘A Period-Friendly World’.”
He further commended the government for launching a Free Sanitary Pad initiative, pledging Oxfam’s full support in working alongside authorities to ensure menstrual equity.
“It is important that when it comes to menstruation, we don’t treat it as a girl’s or woman’s issue. It is supposed to be an issue that concerns everyone. We need the boys and we need the men; it is the boys that make the girls pregnant, and it is the men that make the women pregnant,” Adams stated.