Tanzania

WomenChoice Industries: Lucy Odiwa's Journey

How personal experience, a little impactful financing and a deep commitment to improving the lives of women and girls have contributed towards ending period poverty in Tanzania.

WomenChoice Industries, a Rockflower partner since April 2019, is a social enterprise that manufactures and distributes affordable reusable sanitary towels to women and girls  from low income communities in Tanzania. The early investment from Rockflower provided an opportunity to scale up  the production and distribution of the products, whilst at the same time providing important menstrual  hygiene management information and empowering  socially  disadvantaged  women  on the  MHM business model with financial and management skills. 

WomenChoice  Industries  co-Founder, Ms. Lucy Odiwa had a deeply personal experience at the start of her menstrual experience at Asumbi  Girls  secondary  school  in Western Kenya, which began her journey into this work.  At age 16 Lucy struggled with the challenge of access to menstrual care products, information and services with little open conversation around menstruation. Access to  information is restricted by social and cultural taboos, myths and misconceptions, such that it prohibits women and girls the ability to discuss the experience openly with their siblings, parents and or relatives.  Lucy recalls a particularly tough moment in a Maths class when she was called to calculate an algebraic equation in Mathematics, she realized as she was standing at the blackboard that she was also leaking blood onto her clothes. 

Confused and embarrassed Lucy ran to the dormitory, and on the way she  picked up a fellow   student’s white sock hanging from a clothesline and used it to manage her menses. Lucy would subsequently go on to miss school for five consecutive  days, missing out on important lessons and reducing her ability to perform as a nomal A+ student in Mathematics.  She would later discover in her research that many girls feigned sickness to be able to skip class during their periods so that they wouldn’t be put in the position to be ashamed if they were unable to manage their menstrual cycles in public at school. 

Young women and girls from low  resource  settings  in Tanzania, face  a myriad of  menstrual  hygiene management health challenges as they go about their daily routines. They lack  proper menstrual management absorbents, forcing them to  trade “Sex for pads’’  with men  twice or even three times their age.  This in turn exposes them to early and unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions , sexually transmitted diseases and HIV/AIDs. Just as importantly girls might miss school for up to 4-7 days a month, a total of 48-84 days  annually  due  to menstruation.

Lucy’s personal experience and the stories she heard from other girls, convinced her that something had to be done and she co-founded WomenChoice Industries as a solution to this   menstrual hygiene management challenge. Ms Odiwa innovated the low cost reusable sanitary towels “salama, safe pads’’.  The reusable sanitary towel is affordable, low priced,  chemical free, odourless, and can withstand up to 100 washings. It can save on menstrual hygiene expenses by between 75-90%  annually  and is kept hygienic by simple  hand washing with water and a bar of soap. The cost per pack of 5 pieces  of  pads cost  US$ 2.3 compared  to US$ 72 annually for disposable  sanitary  towels.

Rockflower’s initial investment of $7,500 allowed Lucy the breathing room she needed to expand her inventory and develop her business model. Now just over two years later she has taken the small social enterprise to a mid level business reaching a great many girls with low cost and affordable reusable sanitary towels. 

Achievements: 

  • Manufactured and distributed a total of  34,234  packets  of  low  priced , affordable   reusable sanitary  towels  by the end of  June  2021.

  • Established a schools based menstrual hygiene management information system, opening up the menstrual hygiene management conversation in 25 primary and secondary   schools  reaching 12,657  school  students  by the end of June  2021

  • Empowered a total of 300 socially disadvantaged women and girls, sex workers, teenage mothers,  single mothers,  widows  and people   with  HIV/A  on  menstrual hygiene  management  models,  business and financial literacy skills engaging them as vendors  and sales  agents 

  • Distributed a total of 16,756 girls in schools with  with low cost, affordable  reusable  sanitary towels  by  June  2021

WomenChoice Industries  has received several international recognitions and has become the top 50  and top 20 African business Heroes for its role in implementing the Sustainable  Development Goals  and supporting  women  led initiatives  

Challenges

The enterprise faced several developmental  challenges.

  • Menstrual hygiene management  information, is shrouded with several social and cultural taboos, myths and misconceptions,  such that it is not openly discussed, this  has a huge impact on the potential sales of the reusable sanitary towels.

  • The tax management system for the products imported from outside the country -  the government offers tax exemption for the imported disposable menstrual care products, but does not offer the same  exemptions for raw materials  associated   with the production of menstrual care products. This keeps the cost of importing these materials very high.

  • The increasing operational  costs,  including transport  and logistics to expand access to  reusable  sanitary  towels into the remotest part of the country still presents critical  challenges impacting the product  accessibility and the ability to access the target  population promptly  and in a timely manner. 

  • Period poverty: the inability of the local women and girls to purchase reusable sanitary  towels, the majority  of  women  still remain  unable  to  buy pads as the majority  earn  less than  US$ 1.9 a day.

  • Lack of mobile phones for many of the sales agents and vendors.  WomenChoice Industries uses the WhatsApp application in the promotion and marketing strategies , but many of the socially disadvantaged women lack a smartphone gadget,  to promptly  access communication. 

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Mategemeo Women Association

Tanzania

Schools and borders are closed. However, Tanzanian President John Magufali has been criticized for encouraging the public to attend places of worship. President Magufali has stated that Dar es Salaam will never be in lockdown.

Concerns, Challenges and Adaptation Measures

Mategemeo Women Association has taken the threat of the coronavirus very seriously and followed WHO guidelines for social distancing. In addition to providing sanitation equipment, they are adjusting their programming to fit within this new “normal”. Spreading correct information on preventative measures has been done through mass text messaging and megaphones. Additionally, Mategemeo Women Association has created Online Girls’ Clubs, social distancing communication networks, and distancing learning to ensure that girls do not feel isolated during this time and have the support networks they need. These will cover life skills, sexual education, personal well-being and provide motivation for learning until school begins again.

Emergency Fund

Mategemeo Women Association received assistance from our Emergency Fund two ways. The first was through a donation made by Rockflower for the production of reusable face masks by WomenChoice Industries. 900 masks were produced, so far over 700 have been distributed. In addition to the face masks, Mategemeo Women Association received funds to assist families in purchasing food, hand sanitizer, soap, and essential medicines.

WomenChoice Industries

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Tanzania

Schools and borders are closed. However, Tanzanian President John Magufali has been criticized for encouraging the public to attend places of worship. President Magufali has stated that Dar es Salaam will never be in lockdown.

Concerns and Challenges

Business has slowed as travel restrictions have been put in place that limit the transit of goods to one driver.

Adaptation Measures

In addition to manufacturing reusable sanitary towels, WomenChoice Industries has begun producing and distributing reusable masks to their staff and the local community.

Rockflower’s Emergency Fund donated the money for WomenChoice Industries to make face masks for our other partner in Tanzania, Mategemeo Women Association. They were finished last week and sent by bus from Tanga to Arusha.

Rockflower Partners with Womenchoice Industries to Create Reusable Sanitary Pads

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Rockflower is pleased to announce a new partnership with Womenschoice Industries, a social enterprise established to provide solutions to menstrual and other feminine hygiene problems.

Rockflower is partnering with Womenchoice Industries to invest in scaling up the production of resusable sanitary pads and other feminine hygiene products to improve economic opportunities for low income families in Muheza, Tanzania and to keep girls in school.  

Find out more about Reusable Sanitary Pads Project.

The founder of Womenchoice Industries, Lucy Odiwa, was also the winner of the SDGs and Her competition that another one of our partners, Mukuru Cookstoves, placed second in. Read more about the competition and her win here.