Reservations

Luxury Travel

Reservations

Luxury Travel

Bloody Good Period provides menstrual products to Asylum Seekers, refugees, and other who can't afford them. Period poverty is a global issue defined by a lack of access to period products, compounded with a lack of informed choice of products and menstrual education.

The number of organisations Bloody Good Period has partnered with around the country to help people have bloody good periods.

The average amount someone spends on sanitary products in a lifetime

number of period packs delivered to food banks and refuges, organisations supporting asylum seekers and refugees during the COVID-19 pandemic.

refugees said they struggled to
find pads “most of the time”

the number of London drop-in services and groups currently distributing period products

75%

of the 78 women interviewed by charity women for refuge, struggled to obtain period products while destitute, forcing them to overuse a product, improvise, or beg.

refugeees said they struggled to find period products throughout the entire time that they were destitute – that could be many years.

percent of girls in the UK are unable to afford period wear.

number of people receiving period products per month.

the amount asylum seekers received in state support – hardly enough to live on, let alone buy sanitary product.

The majority of people who seek asylum are NOT ALLOWED to work

The number of organisations Bloody Good Period has partnered with around the country to help people have bloody good periods.

refugeees said they struggled to find period products throughout the entire time that they were destitute – that could be many years.

percent of girls in the UK are unable to afford period wear.

number of people receiving period products per month.

The average amount someone spends on sanitary products in a lifetime

number of period packs delivered to food banks and refuges, organisations supporting asylum seekers and refugees during the COVID-19 pandemic.

refugees said they struggled to find pads “most of the time”

the amount asylum seekers received in state support – hardly enough to live on, let alone buy sanitary product.

The majority of people who seek asylum are NOT ALLOWED to work

the number of London drop-in services and groups currently distributing period products

75%

of the 78 women interviewed by charity women for refuge, struggled to obtain period products while destitute, forcing them to overuse a product, improvise, or beg.