Expert calls for better supports around menstrual health in youth sports
A leading researcher on sport, gender, and menstrual health says that youth sports coaches have to educate themselves about periods.
Studies show that girls drop out of organized sport at more than twice the rate that boys do, especially at the onset of adolescence. Dr. Sarah Zipp’s research has found that one of the biggest obstacles preventing young women from staying in sport is menstruation and that most athletic programs lack the supports to help them play through their periods or even discuss them with their coaches or adult volunteers.
“We need to a) be able to talk about it, we need to break down the stigma,” said Zipp, whose non-profit Power to Play, Period, seeks to demystify the menstrual cycle in the world of sports. “B) we need to have better education. We need to know more about what the menstrual cycle is, how it impacts people, what are the symptoms.
“And then c), we need to do the things that we can that are within control of coaches and program leaders to better support them to keep them playing.”