Sanitary Protection Through the Ages.

Sanitary protection products including tampons and pads displayed on a soft pink surface.

Sanitary products are not the most attractive items at the best of times. How fortunate we are to live in the times of disposable, efficient protection! Next time you feel the ardour of dealing with your period, take some time to reflect on just how far humble sanitary protection has come.

Through the ages, women have used either tampons or bandages for sanitary protection. But until World War 1, the only significant improvement over the basic bandage – which really was more a statement of class anyway – was that the civilized women of the Roman Empire used cloth bandages; whereas the ‘savages’ in Africa and Australia used bandages made of grass or vegetable fibre.

Thrifty Frenchwomen were still washing out their menstrual rags in the 1940s; in parts of South America, disposable pads have only been marketed in the last 30 years.

Women often used a variety of home-made menstrual pads which they crafted from various fabrics, leftover scraps, grass, or other absorbent materials, to collect their period. Many probably used nothing at all. Women often used strips of folded old cloth (rags) to catch their menstrual flow, which is why the term “on the rag” is used to refer to menstruation.

Historical sanitary products and methods for menstrual protection. In underdeveloped countries, reusable or makeshift pads are still used to collect menstrual blood. Rags, soil, and mud are also reportedly used for collecting menstrual flow.

Among tampon users, there was more variety. In ancient Japan women used from eight to twelve paper tampons a day, held in place by a bandage called kama (‘pony’). For centuries, Indonesian women made tampons from vegetable fibre. Roman women wore tampons of soft wool, and Egyptian women, rolls of soft papyrus. Rolls of grass and roots served women of Equatorial Africa.

Until about 1925, American women wore a nappy of birds-eye or flannel, which were washed and re-used. These were cumbersome, uncomfortable and often caused pain. Johnson & Johnson manufactured ‘Lister’s Towels’ in 1896 the first commercial, disposable pad, made of gauze covered cotton.

Disposable menstrual pads grew from Benjamin Franklin’s invention designed to save soldiers with buckshot wounds. Several of the first disposable pad manufacturers were also manufacturers of bandages, which gives an indication of what these products would have been like.

The first of the disposable pads were generally in the form of a cotton wool or similar fibrous rectangle covered with an absorbent liner. The liner ends were extended front and back so as to fit through loops in a special girdle or belt worn beneath undergarments. This design was notorious for slipping either forward or back of the intended position.

Even after disposable pads were commercially available, for several years they were too expensive for many women to afford. It took several years for disposable menstrual pads to become commonplace and the billion dollar industry it is today.

 

author avatar
Kate Carlile
Kate brings sexy back to the office as our Administration Manager and all-round most loveliest lady in the world. She is super Mum to four and the SAHM office would literally fall apart without her. Her dream is to colour the world purple whilst travelling around it in a lavender Winnebago!

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Responses to “Sanitary Protection Through the Ages.”

  1. Bee Avatar
    Bee

    It’s sad that disposable tampons and pads have now become the norm when there are reusable options like the JuJu menstrual cup which are better for our bodies and our environment.

  2. mel Avatar
    mel

    What about an “Menstrual Cup”? A cup made of silicone for insertion and collection. No TSS so it ca last longer in between emptying/changing. No waste or rubbish clogging up the system!

  3. Mando Avatar
    Mando

    Washable, reusable cloth pads have come a long way in recent times, as have cloth nappies. They are made of soft, comfortable, breathable fabrics with great absorbency, and are easy to wash. Many women have reported lighter flow and less cramping pain with continued use. Much healthier for your body and soooo much less landfill of plastic and bleached chemically treated paper 😀

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