Can 'period Leave' Ever Work? - BBC Worklife

Skip to content
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Arts
  • Travel
  • Earth
  • Audio
  • Video
  • Live
HomeNewsSportBusinessTechnologyHealthCultureArtsTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveWeatherNewslettersCan ‘period leave’ ever work?8 September 2017ShareSaveClaire LampenFeatures correspondentShareSave
Getty Images (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images

Moves to give women time off for periods have met mixed responses – so how can employers create policies that support female workers?

Bex Baxter was horrified to walk into her office one day and find her firm’s receptionist “bent double” at the front desk, “white as a sheet and clearly in pain” while serving a customer.

“I immediately went to excuse her from her shift,” says Baxter, then a director at the company. “She was really embarrassed and shooed me away, saying, ‘It’s just my period, I’ll get through it.’”

Menstrual leave already exists in several countries but has been widely criticised as counterproductive

Up until then, Baxter hadn’t even considered whether her former employer, a Bristol-based firm called Coexist that creates community spaces in South West England, had a corporate ‘period policy’.

But in that moment, she says, she thought about basic human rights — that a standard biological process should never be shameful.

You may also like:

Inked, the last workplace taboo

Why we should care about Hollywood pay

Why women should interrupt men

Menstrual leave, a policy that affords women suffering extreme period pain one or two days off work, already exists in several countries around the world, but has been widely criticised as counterproductive, often reinforcing negative stereotypes of female workers.

Getty Images A large number of workers worldwide experience regular disruptive pain, but stigma can prevent problems being addressed (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
A large number of workers worldwide experience regular disruptive pain, but stigma can prevent problems being addressed (Credit: Getty Images)

In some Asian countries, including Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan, South Korea and certain Chinese provinces, women are allowed to stay home for a designated part of their monthly periods. Few take advantage of it, though, many citing fear of sexual harassment or perceptions of weakness.

And when the Italian parliament considered introducing national period leave in March, many wondered whether eligibility for three paid days a month off risked discouraging employers from hiring women in the first place.

Taboo topic

Stigma around periods – the idea that menstruation is dirty, shameful and unmentionable – can keep girls and women away from school and out of the workforce. For example, a woman without access to sanitary products may have to stay at home during her period, while a garment worker risks losing her job for getting up to change her pad before break time, provided there are facilities for her to manage her menstruation at all.

One study suggested that people viewed tampon-toting women as less competent, less likeable and physically off-putting

Even women working in office environments with conveniently located toilets and flexible schedules go to great lengths to hide periods: relatively few researchers have explored how knowledge that a woman is on her period affects her public perception, but one 2002 study suggested that people viewed tampon-toting women as less competent, less likeable and physically off-putting.

Getty Images A 2002 experiment studied reactions to women who dropped tampons from their handbags. They were seen as less likeable than those who had dropped hairclips (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
A 2002 experiment studied reactions to women who dropped tampons from their handbags. They were seen as less likeable than those who had dropped hairclips (Credit: Getty Images)

Yet women now make up nearly 40% of the global workforce, and up to  20% of women experience extreme cramps at the onset of a period – a condition called dysmenorrhea, which is intense enough to derail their daily lives. For these women, menstrual leave might represent relief, but not if it holds them back professionally. So how do we make it work?

If open conversation erodes taboos, period leave at least offers one way to get people talking

Period drama

Persistent stigma means women suffer in silence: according to a poll BBC commissioned from YouGov in 2016

  • More than half of those surveyed said period pain interferes with their jobs
  • Only 27% felt comfortable telling their boss what was wrong
  • “Corporate business needed to be re-educated [about] menstruation, reframe its purpose and allow women to be women without any stigma,” says Baxter, who has left Coexist but remains an advisor on Coexist’s period policy.

    If open conversation erodes taboos, period leave at least offers one way to get people talking. The challenge is finding a way to implement it that isn’t detrimental to women’s participation in the workforce.

    Putting it in practice

    How a company does that depends on its size and structure, but there are a few key ingredients. Language is one, says Lara Owen, a consultant on menstruation and menopause in the workplace and a PhD candidate at Monash Business School in Melbourne, Australia.

    Menstrual leave is a loaded term, one that may cause people who have never experienced severe cramps to make unfounded assumptions; namely, “that women are going to get free time off for something that isn’t really a problem,” Owen says. Instead of “menstrual leave,” she prefers terminology that conveys accommodations for people managing periods in the office, rather than simply sending them home.

    Lara Owen Menstrual leave is a loaded term that can give rise to unfounded assumptions, says Lara Owen (Credit: Lara Owen)Lara Owen
    Menstrual leave is a loaded term that can give rise to unfounded assumptions, says Lara Owen (Credit: Lara Owen)

    Eden King, an associate professor of psychology at Texas’ Rice University who focuses on workplace discrimination, agreed that for-women policies can backfire. King suggests removing gender from the equation entirely might allow dysmenorrhea sufferers to get the break they need.

    A policy that singles out a particular group as needing extra care, as being somehow weaker, does have a potential for backlash

    “Offer flexible leave policies for all workers in your organisation, so that people can take leave when they’re sick, no matter what the reason,” she says. “That puts everybody on the same footing, whereas a policy that singles out a particular group as needing extra care, as being somehow weaker, does have a potential for backlash and perpetuation of gender stereotypes.”

    However, if part of the point of ‘period leave’ is to break down taboos, why swerve the word menstruation? Menstruation isn’t an illness, Owen points out. On the contrary, a regular cycle typically signifies health. While flexibility is crucial, she says, periods might make sense listed under a company’s acceptable reasons to take personal leave.

    Getty Images Up to  20% of women experience extreme cramps at the onset of a period – a condition called dysmenorrhea (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
    Up to 20% of women experience extreme cramps at the onset of a period – a condition called dysmenorrhea (Credit: Getty Images)

    “Naming the problem boldly and proudly and with no embarrassment is the way to address stigma and it can take a long time,” says Lisa Schechtman, director of policy and advocacy for WaterAid America. But women must be involved, she adds.

    “These sorts of policies cannot be designed by men for women. The affected people always, always need to participate in designing, implementing and monitoring a programme around menstruation.”

    Baxter aims to do all of this: soliciting feedback from employees, she is helping Coexist craft a policy will recognise that a customer-facing employee might have different needs to a woman sitting in the back office.

    Next month, Coexist will announce a new kind of menstrual policy. Baxter says female workers will be allowed the flexibility they need to integrate periods into their professional schedules.

    Working closely with Owen, Baxter wants to brand periods as a positive – “a tool for optimum health and vitality,” she says.

    To comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Capital, please head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.

    If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter called "If You Only Read 6 Things This Week". A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.

    WorkplaceHealthWatchThe surprising health benefit of hugs

    The power of hugs for reducing inflammation in the body

    Dr. Lisa Dahlgren discusses the effect human touch has on our health and wellbeing.

    HealthGetty Images 961375412

    The truth about the most physically active generation

    Gen Z may lead the way when it comes to a healthy lifestyle, but is Gen Z the healthiest generation overall?

    HealthGetty Images 1214764511

    Is Gen Z the healthiest generation?

    With all the advantages of the modern world, which generation is the healthiest?

    HealthGetty Images 824853668

    Does alcohol affect male fertility?

    Which external factors affect male sperm count and why.

    HealthGetty Images 1302131279

    Lördagsgodis: Why Swedes only eat sweets on Saturdays

    Why Swedes only eat sweets on Saturdays.

    HealthGetty Images 892955980

    Is it possible to 'hack' your own immune system?

    Many of us are keen to find ways to optimise our immune system - but is it possible?

    HealthGetty Images 465083677

    Can science reverse the ageing process?

    Just how far can we intervene in the way our bodies age?

    HealthHL 3

    How one woman's 'immortal' cells changed the world

    In 1951, a young woman from Baltimore died of cancer. Her death would change medical science forever.

    HealthPorto

    What happened after this country decriminalised all drugs?

    The country had one of the worst rates of overdose deaths in Europe.

    HealthHow to keep yourself recharged and avoid emotional burnout

    How to keep recharged and avoid emotional burnout

    Here are some expert tips for avoiding burnout before you're already burn out.

    HealthThe new Dutch wellness trend taking over the world

    Why a Dutch wellness trend is taking the world by storm

    Feeling stressed? The Dutch trend, Koeknuffelen, might be just the thing for you.

    HealthHow did coronavirus start?

    How did coronavirus start and spread?

    In this episode of My World, we have everything you need to know about coronavirus.

    Healthhand washing virus

    Why you're washing your hands wrong

    A virologist demonstrates how germs spread and what the best methods are to avoid catching a virus.

    HealthWhat are viruses? And how do they spread?

    What are viruses? And how do they spread?

    Concerns are growing that the recently-detected coronavirus may spread around the world.

    HealthThe world's radioactive 'capital'

    The radioactive 'capital' of the world

    The Czech mining town Jachymov is home to the most important discovery in the field of radioactivity.

    HealthA suited business person walks into a forest.

    Japan's forest of healing

    Forest bathing is a popular activity for the urbanised and stressed Japanese becoming cut off from nature.

    HealthWhy drinking too much water could kill you

    Why drinking too much water could be life-threatening

    Marathon runner Johanna Pakenham was rushed to the hospital after drinking five litres of water.

    Health'A new generation of nicotine addicts'

    'A new generation of nicotine addicts'

    Unpacking the dangers behind the US vaping craze

    HealthWhat happens when you age

    What happens when you age?

    The experiment that makes you grow old in an afternoon

    HealthWhy are people in the USA living shorter lives?

    Why are people in the USA living shorter lives?

    Nobel Prize-winning economist Sir Angus Deaton says these "deaths of despair" are driven by inequality.

    HealthMore from the BBC4 hrs agoAmanda, our case study, is seated wearing a grey tracksuit with her hand raised.

    Stroke survivors trial new at-home tech: 'It's given me my freedom back'

    Participants in the NHS 'Triceps' trial wear a device in their ear which emits electrical pulses while they do rehab.

    4 hrs ago7 hrs agoJesy Nelson in a pink-sequinned top and shorts arrives at Global Radio Studios in Leicester Square

    Jesy Nelson in tears as SMA petition hits 100,000 signatures

    The milestone means the petition, to include SMA in post-birth baby checks for serious health conditions, will be debated in Parliament.

    7 hrs ago12 hrs agoAn elderly woman wearing a pink nightdress, getting her blood pressure checked by another person sitting on a bed next to her. The faces of the people cannot be seen in the picture.

    Support service for discharged patients is renewed

    The service offers support to patients leaving hospital and aims to prevent costly readmissions.

    12 hrs ago14 hrs agoA woman with long blonde hair, aged around 60. She is wearing a green top and smiling into the camera.

    Teen who stabbed grandmother given hospital order

    Brandon Skelton was diagnosed with schizophrenia following the attack in Leeds in 2023, a court hears.

    14 hrs ago20 hrs agoThree women singing and waving their hands in the air (Credit: Getty Images)

    The lifelong benefits of making music

    From helping people cope with age-related disorders to altering our perception of physical pain, music's impact on our bodies can ring loud.

    20 hrs ago

    Tag » What To Say When Calling In Sick Because Of Period