PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Making chemistry more accessible at the University of Oxford by providing period products

Making chemistry more accessible at the University of Oxford by providing period products
2023-10-24
(Press-News.org) When it comes to the question of who gets to be a scientist, gender disparities are well-documented in many fields. Patching the infamous “leaky pipeline” can be a thorny problem, but during the 2022–2023 school year, the Department of Chemistry at the University of Oxford took a simple and practical step forward: they began offering period products in the department’s bathrooms. In an article publishing October 25 in the journal Trends in Chemistry, three students involved in the Oxford Period Project and their supervising professor share the project’s success and offer advice for how others can implement this accommodation at their own institutions.

Before October 2022 in Oxford’s chemistry department, period products were available in some female bathrooms, but they were more expensive than products sold elsewhere. And while food vending machines in the department had been updated to take card payments, the department’s period products still needed to be purchased with coins.

“In the worst-case scenario, a student needing period products would have to ask peers for spare coins or products or leave the department to find or buy products elsewhere. Both options are stressful alternatives and often not compatible with the high number of contact hours a chemistry degree involves,” write Elba Feo, Sofia Olendraru, Charlie H. Simms, and Michael O’Neill, three chemistry students at Oxford and their chemistry professor.

Inspired by a 2018 report from the Royal Society of Chemistry, the students lobbied to make free period products available to all chemistry students and faculty. The department administration had some misgivings about the project, including concerns about people "hoarding" free products. Nevertheless, pads and tampons were made available in open baskets near the sinks of female bathrooms beginning in fall 2022.

The feedback has been positive. “Students feel supported, especially during long lab sessions where the few short breaks make it difficult to mitigate period emergencies if products are inaccessible,” writes the team.

The authors offer some suggestions to help make future projects even more successful. They note that the current products provided are not eco-friendly and are presently only stocked in female bathrooms. Going forward, they suggest providing a sign-up for free menstrual cups as a more sustainable option and underline the importance of using inclusive language to both reduce the stigma around periods and to be inclusive of people of all genders who menstruate.

The authors hope that their project can inspire other university departments to take this first step towards inclusivity. They write, “Access to free period products has been incredibly well received by students and staff, and it is an easy and practical way to improve the experience of studying chemistry for those with periods.”

 

###

 

This work was supported by funding from the Royal Society of Chemistry.

Trends in Chemistry, Gardner et al. “Periods and practicals: how to help your students.” https://www.cell.com/trends/chemistry/fulltext/S2589-5974(23)00221-6

Trends in Chemistry (@TrendsChemistry), published by Cell Press, is the first Trends reviews journal in the physical sciences. The journal publishes thoughtfully designed review, opinion, and short articles covering the breadth of chemistry and its subdisciplines in an accessible, educational manner. Visit: https://www.cell.com/trends/chemistry/home. To receive Cell Press media alerts, please contact press@cell.com.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Making chemistry more accessible at the University of Oxford by providing period products Making chemistry more accessible at the University of Oxford by providing period products 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Traditional chinese medicine compound (tongxinluo) and clinical outcomes of patients with acute myocardial infarction

2023-10-24
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial of 3,777 patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI; a type of heart attack), the Chinese patent medicine Tongxinluo, as an adjunctive therapy in addition to STEMI guideline-directed treatments, significantly improved both 30-day and 1-year clinical outcomes. Further research is needed to determine the mechanism of action of Tongxinluo in STEMI.  Authors: Yuejin Yang, M.D., Ph.D., and Runlin Gao, M.D., of the Chinese Academy of Medical ...

Getting maximum calories in shortest time is the priority for bumblebees

Getting maximum calories in shortest time is the priority for bumblebees
2023-10-24
Research has found that bumblebees make foraging choices to collect the most sugar from flowers in the shortest time – even if that means using more energy in the process – to provide an immediate energy boost for the colony. A new study investigating nectar drinking in one of the most common bumblebees in the UK, Bombus terrestris, has found that when foraging they maximise the amount of nectar sugar they take back to the colony each minute. To make their choices, the bumblebees trade off the time they spend collecting nectar with the energy content of that nectar. This means ...

Incidence and transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in child care centers after COVID-19 vaccines

2023-10-24
About The Study: In this examination of SARS-CoV-2 incidence and transmission in child care centers (CCCs) and students’ households, transmission within CCCs and from children infected at CCCs into households was low in this study that included 83 children in 11 CCCs. These findings suggest that current testing and exclusion recommendations for SARS-CoV-2 in CCCs should be aligned with those for other respiratory viruses with similar morbidity and greater transmission to households. Authors: Timothy R. Shope, ...

Neurodevelopmental outcomes among offspring exposed to corticosteroid and B2-adrenergic agonists in utero

2023-10-24
About The Study: The results of this study of 91,460 mother-offspring pairs found no association between in utero corticosteroid and β2-adrenergic agonist exposure and offspring neurodevelopmental outcomes, regardless of the timing of exposure. Despite the limitations and low power of the study, the findings suggest that corticosteroids and β2-adrenergic agonists are safe for pregnant individuals with asthma and the neurodevelopment of their offspring. Authors: Abir Nagata, Ph.D., of Osaka University in Osaka, Japan, and Toshio Masumoto, Ph.D., of Tottori University ...

Child care centers unlikely source for COVID-19 transmission, study finds

Child care centers unlikely source for COVID-19 transmission, study finds
2023-10-24
Children in child care centers are not spreading COVID-19 at significant rates to caregivers or other children at the center, nor to their households, according to a study led by University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh pediatrician-scientists and published today in JAMA Network Open. The findings suggest that recommendations to test symptomatic children for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and keep positive children home from child care for prolonged periods can be revised to align with those for other serious ...

Pew funds 6 teams to advance cutting-edge biomedical research

2023-10-24
PHILADELPHIA—The Pew Charitable Trusts announced today the six pairs of researchers who will make up its 2023 class of Innovation Fund investigators. These 12 acclaimed scientists—all alumni or advisors of Pew’s biomedical programs in the United States and Latin America—will partner on interdisciplinary research projects exploring key questions in human biology and disease. Combining the researchers’ expertise in topics ranging from neuroscience and immunology to cancer biology, these collaborations will help boost scientific discovery and improve human health. “An interdisciplinary approach to research is critical to uncovering scientific breakthroughs ...

Givers to crowdfunding campaigns enjoy vicarious success

Givers to crowdfunding campaigns enjoy vicarious success
2023-10-24
Why would someone decide to give their money to help a stranger bring a creative project to life? Recent research has found that backers of crowdfunding projects participate, in part, because of a sense of indirect success and the feeling that they are contributing to something bigger. Crowdfunding — raising money for a new venture by collecting small amounts from many people — is most often done online, and messaging on the most popular sites reinforces the perception of a more democratic market. But the reality is a bit ...

Climate report: ‘Uncharted territory’ imperils life on Earth

Climate report: ‘Uncharted territory’ imperils life on Earth
2023-10-24
CORVALLIS, Ore. – An international coalition of climate scientists says in a paper published today that the Earth’s vital signs have worsened beyond anything humans have yet seen, to the point that life on the planet is imperiled. William Ripple, a distinguished professor in the Oregon State University College of Forestry, and former OSU postdoctoral researcher Christopher Wolf are the lead authors of the report, and 10 other U.S. and global scientists are co-authors. “Without actions ...

World Scientists' Climate Report highlights perils as Earth enters "uncharted territory"

World Scientists Climate Report highlights perils as Earth enters uncharted territory
2023-10-24
In a year marked by wildfire, catastrophic flooding, and deadly weather events, an international team of scientists has updated its influential 2019 World Scientists Warning of a Climate Emergency report, which has been cosigned by over 15,000 scientists representing 163 countries. According to the team, “life on planet Earth is under siege” and “we are now in uncharted territory.”                 Writing in the journal BioScience, William Ripple, a distinguished ...

Blood test detects tumors early in families with cancer

2023-10-24
Researchers from The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR) and University Health Network (UHN) have demonstrated that by analyzing patients’ blood samples, they are able to detect cancer earlier in individuals with Li-Fraumeni syndrome, an inherited condition with an almost 100 percent life-time risk of developing cancer. The research, led by Drs. Trevor Pugh and Raymond Kim at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, UHN and OICR and Dr. David Malkin at SickKids, has been published in Cancer Discovery. The study, which was funded primarily ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study identifies a potential treatment for obesity-linked breathing disorder

From single cells to complex creatures: New study points to origins of animal multicellularity

Language disparities in continuous glucose monitoring for type 2 diabetes

New hormonal pathway links oxytocin to insulin secretion in the pancreas

Optimal management of erosive esophagitis: An evidence-based and pragmatic approach

For patients with multiple cancers, a colorectal cancer diagnosis could be lifesaving — or life-threatening

Digital inhalers may detect early warning signs of COPD flare-ups

Living near harmful algal blooms reduces life expectancy with ALS

Chemical analysis of polyphenolic content and antioxidant screening of 17 African propolis samples using RP-HPLC and spectroscopy

Mount Sinai and Cancer Research Institute team up to improve patient outcomes in immunotherapy

Suicide risk elevated among young adults with disabilities

Safeguarding Mendelian randomization: editorial urges rethink in methodological rigor

Using AI to find persuasive public health messages and automate real-time campaigns

Gene therapy for glaucoma

Teaching robots to build without blueprints

Negative perception of scientists working on AI

How disrupted daily rhythms can affect adolescent brain development

New use for old drug: study finds potential of heart drug for treating growth disorders

Head-to-head study shows bariatric surgery superior to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss

Psychiatric disorders less likely after weight-loss surgery than treatment with GLP-1s

The higher the body mass index, the higher the risk for complications after bariatric surgery

Black patients have higher rate of minor complications after metabolic and bariatric surgery than white patients

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning — project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

4 ERC Advanced Grants: 10 million Euro for ISTA

ERC awards €2.5 million to TIGEM scientist for project on programmable genetic circuits

Tree rings reveal increasing rainfall seasonality in the Amazon

Scientists find unexpected deep roots in plants

Researchers unveil the immune cells responsible for systemic sclerosis’s deadliest complications

New blood test holds potential to reduce liver transplant failures

Science clears the way to treating the trickiest bladder cancers

[Press-News.org] Making chemistry more accessible at the University of Oxford by providing period products