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<p>Our Sex and Relationships Education guidance encourages schools to make adequate
and sensitive arrangements to help girls cope with menstruation. Schools are best
placed to assess the needs of their pupils, have discretion over how they use their
funding and can make sanitary products available to pupils if they identify this as
a barrier to attainment or attendance.</p><p> </p><p>We support schools in addressing
the needs of disadvantaged pupils through the provision of the Pupil Premium, equivalent
to almost £2.5 billion of additional funding this year alone. Moreover, as a government,
in this round of the Tampon Tax Fund we will provide £1.5 million for the ‘Let’s Talk.
Period.’ Project, which will distribute sanitary products to young women and girls
in need across England.</p><p> </p><p>We are committed to ensuring that any action
to support disadvantaged pupils is based on robust evidence. We have sought to establish
whether there has been any rigorous national assessment of the prevalence of period
poverty or its impact on attendance, however none appears available. We reached out
to school stakeholders in July 2017 through the Association of School and College
Leaders forum asking for contributions on the issue and received a very limited response.
As promised in the House, we have reviewed our absence statistics and our recently
published analysis shows no evidence that period poverty has a significant nation-wide
impact on school attendance. We do want to find out more; this is why we intend to
place questions on these issues in the department’s 2018 surveys for pupils and senior
school leaders.</p>
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