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Sanitary pad world record set in India to promote menstrual hygiene

A new Guinness World Record has been set for the longest line of sanitary pads in a move aimed at promoting menstrual hygiene.

An Indian woman arrange the sanitary napkins during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record by creating the 'longest line of sanitary pads'.

An Indian woman arrange the sanitary napkins during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record by creating the 'longest line of sanitary pads'. Source: AAP

Participants at a medical congress in India have set a new Guinness World Record for the longest line of sanitary pads, in a move aimed at promoting menstrual hygiene.

Five hundred people at the 62nd All India Congress of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (AICOG) took seven and a half hours to lay out 10,105 sanitary pads in a line 1,078 metres long.

An Indian man walk between the sanitary napkins arranged during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record by creating the 'longest line of sanitary pads'
An Indian man walk between the sanitary napkins arranged during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record by creating the 'longest line of sanitary pads' Source: EPA

The feat in the southern Indian city of Bangalore, verified by Guinness World Record officials, also included the shape of a uterus under the slogan "Nothing's more cuterus than your uterus".

"Sanitary pads are required for every woman for her hygiene. Hygiene is so important otherwise they will have lot of pelvic infections, urinary infections and all those problems are there," gynaecologist Geeta Pramod Shanbhag told AFP.

According to a National Family Health Survey (NFHS) report published in 2017, only 58 percent of women in India aged 15 to 24 use a hygienic method of menstrual protection, the Hindu daily reported.

An Indian woman arrange the sanitary napkins during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record.
An Indian woman arrange the sanitary napkins during a successful attempt for a Guinness world record. Source: AAP

In July, India withdrew a controversial tax on sanitary pads following a vocal campaign led by activists and Bollywood stars to boost female education and empowerment.

One study by WaterAid and UNICEF found that more than a third of girls in South Asia missed school during their periods.


2 min read

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Source: AFP, SBS


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