How to get FREE sanitary products in the UK, including signing up to the Free Periods scheme
THE current cost of sanitary towels, tampons and moon cups mean that period poverty is a real problem for thousands of women living in the UK.
According to the charity Free Periods, it is estimated that the average British woman will spend over £18,000 on menstrual products in their lifetime.
Meanwhile, 137,700 children have missed school as a direct result of period poverty.
While supermarkets Tesco, Morrisons and Waitrose now subsidise the controversial tampon tax, the five percent extra VAT is still applied to these so-called "luxury" sanitary products in other superstores.
Luckily, if you're struggling to make ends meet during that time of the month, then there are schemes you can rely on to help you get sanitary products for FREE.
The sanitary towel company Always runs a school-based initiative which pledges to give any registered secondary school up to 7,400 free pads a year.
The student unions at Edinburgh University, the University of Sussex, the University of Warwick and the University of Sunderland all have access to free sanitary products for female students in need.
In more health news, this 37-year-old mum who was told she's "too young" for cancer was rushed to A&E with "tumour poking out of her bottom after two years of IBS".
And this woman with a rare disease was TRAMPLED by commuters on the underground who mistook her for a drunk.
Plus this size XXXXL woman is unrecognisable after losing 13st and ditching her £50-a-DAY fast food habit.
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