Audio By Carbonatix
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Nguvu Mining Limited and Adamus Resources, Angela List, has presented 150 boxes of sanitary pads to some schools in the Ellembelle District of the Western Region.
The beneficiary schools are; Anwia Catholic, Nkroful Methodists Nkroful Catholic, Nyaniba Basic, Asanda SDA and Kikam Methodist and a host of others to commemorate this year’s Menstrual Hygiene Day (MHD) celebration in the area.
The global theme for the celebration was “#PeriodFriendlyWorld” and the theme from the Ghana Education Service (GES) in the Ellembelle District was “Together for a period-friendly circuit”.
In her remarks, Ms List pointed out that “some of our girls lack access to menstrual products and adequate facilities for menstrual health”.

She noted that poor menstrual health and hygiene undercut fundamental rights for women and girls, worsening social and economic inequalities.
“So, there is the need for them to be supported during this period because there are serious health risks if menstruation is unhygienically managed. So, we are here to ensure that they manage themselves properly during this period”,she said.

Ms List continued that good menstrual health and hygiene practices can prevent infections, reduce odours, and help the individual stay comfortable during menstruation.
Therefore, she advised the girls to ensure proper dieting during menstruation; “take more iron-based foods to replenish the blood discharged”.
She also educated the boys on menstrual hygiene to support the girls and their sisters during this period instead of stigmatising them.
She explained that “Menstruation is not a disease, some are unable to go to school because of their menstrual cycle. And there are misconceptions created in certain circles that if a girl is menstruating, she is not clean and must not be allowed to cook among others”.
She encouraged the girls to talk to their mothers and female teachers anytime they had challenges during their menstruation. “Pay attention to menstrual hygiene whenever you are within this period and then wrap your sanitary pad in a piece of paper or tissue and dispose of it in a trash can. Try as much as possible to keep yourself clean and change your sanitary pad as soon as it becomes heavy”, she advised.
Latest Stories
-
DVLA extends use of DP stickers and DV plates amid new plate rollout delay
11 minutes -
What’s in a nickname? AFCON 2025 teams have stories to tell
22 minutes -
DVLA suspends rollout of new number plates planned for January 2026
34 minutes -
Health Minister commends workers, pledges stronger health system in end-of-year message
43 minutes -
Two dead, dozens injured in crash on Cape Coast–Takoradi highway
46 minutes -
NPP Primary: Bawumia still in strong lead in latest Global InfoAnalytics survey
1 hour -
NPP Primary: Bawumia leads with 56% amongst committed voters in latest Global InfoAnalytics poll
1 hour -
Venezuela accuses US of ‘extortion’ over seizure of oil tankers
1 hour -
Zelensky says Ukrainian withdrawal from the East possible in latest peace plan
1 hour -
NDC highlights first year achievements, vows to stabilise economy and strengthen governance
1 hour -
Ghana’s performance broadly satisfactory; but faces downside risks to economy – IMF
2 hours -
Cybercrime crackdown: 48 suspects arrested in Dawhenya operation
2 hours -
Any further easing of policy rate should remain gradual and data dependent – IMF to BoG
2 hours -
ICU-Ghana boss urges gov’t to translate economic gains into better living standards for workers
2 hours -
BoG rolls out new directives on documentations needed for cross border trading
2 hours
