Another challenge was obtaining quality tampons and pads. Kumar said that the team worked to balance finding products that could fit in existing dispensers and also met the needs of students.

“A lot of the products that are left in really old institutions are literally products that were innovated on in the 1940s and 50s. They were cardboard boxes with cardboard tampons and pads with no wings and really thick pads that students don’t feel comfortable wearing,” Kumar said.

According to Stec, the Office of Physical Resources and Planning team was able to find products that fit in both existing metal dispensers and new, cheaper acrylic containers.

“We settled on a clear plastic dispenser that is able to distribute the products that Shruthi and her colleagues viewed as acceptable. And other products that are supposed to be out sometime this year. That was important. And it was just surprisingly more complicated than you would think,” he said.

The last step toward getting the project up and running was communicating with custodial staff who would be in charge of restocking the products.

“It became seamless once we integrated it into the systems that already exist. We don’t really have to think about budgets anymore. We don’t need to think about if it’s there or not anymore because it’s a basic expectation. And I think the training that we’ve given for custodial staff on toilet paper is largely what mirrors what is needed for menstrual products,” Kumar said.

The project, which started in October 2021, took full effect this fall.

Kumar is currently a College senior studying history of science and economics with a secondary in human evolutionary biology.

“So I’m interested in the future working on global health policy, women’s health, health equity, those types of things on a larger scale hopefully,” she said.