One in four girls in Latin America regularly misses school because they lack access to menstrual products, and sustainable intimate care leader Somos Martina is on a mission to change this with The Period Uniform. Supported by the Vice Minister of Education, period underwear has been integrated directly into the official school uniform to put an end to short-term or complicated fixes, such as distributing period products through local programs.
By design, The Period Uniform makes menstrual care and dignity accessible, all while challenging stigma and reducing costs since period underwear is more affordable than single-use period products over time. As part of the initiative, Somos Martina provides period underwear to participating schools at a price comparable to regular underwear, plus access to information and resources for period care.
Period-Proof Student Uniforms
The Period Uniform by Somos Martina Integrates Menstrual Underwear
Trend Themes
-
Embedded Menstrual Care in Apparel — Integration of absorbent, reusable menstrual technology directly into everyday clothing creates opportunities to normalize period care and reduce dependence on distributive supply chains.
-
Institutional Adoption of Healthwear — Government and educational institutions incorporating health-focused garments into official uniforms signals a shift toward systemic solutions for public health and equity.
-
Cost-effective Sustainable Intimates — Rising demand for reusable period products paired with lower lifecycle costs highlights potential to disrupt single-use supply markets and reshape procurement models.
Industry Implications
-
Education — School systems embedding menstrual products into uniforms open pathways for reducing absenteeism and redefining student welfare procurement.
-
Apparel and Uniform Manufacturing — Manufacturers specializing in uniforms can leverage functional textiles and integrated absorbency to differentiate product lines and capture institutional contracts.
-
Women's Health and Hygiene — Organizations in feminine care can expand into product-service hybrids that combine reusable technology with education and distribution partnerships to address access gaps.