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Women who experience homelessness often struggle to access menstrual products

Women who experience homelessness often struggle to access menstrual products. These women may be forced to use unhygienic items which can put them at risk of infection. 

Kits containing sanitizer or a toothbrush and toothpaste don’t always contain enough — or any — pads or tampons. 

It’s something the mobile medical staff with Circle the City, an organization that provides health care to unhoused individuals, often confronts. Perla Puebla is the associate medical director of street medicine with Circle the City,

“Sometimes we carry extra that we get and we'll give them extra if they're on their period or stuff like that, but that's really hard for them out there,” Puebla said.

And they still encounter women who have nothing and are forced to make do. 

"They can use rags, paper, toilet paper from like a QT bathroom,” she added. “Yes, so they use whatever where they can find.”

Another population impacted by this are perimenopausal homeless women who experience heavy bleeding. 

Circle the City’s “Kindness Kits” are assembled and donated by volunteers.

KJZZ senior field correspondent Kathy Ritchie has 20 years of experience reporting and writing stories for national and local media outlets — nearly a decade of it has been spent in public media.