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Menstrual-related changes expected by premenarcheal girls living in rural and urban areas of Mexico

María Luisa Marván, Angeles Vacio and Graciela Espinosa-Hernández

Social Science & Medicine, 2003, vol. 56, issue 4, 863-868

Abstract: Most women experience changes surrounding the start of menstruation. These changes are influenced by sociocultural context. Consequently, certain changes are more pronounced in some cultures than in others. Girls enter menarche with a clear set of paramenstrual expectations that may alter their menstrual cycle-related experiences when they become postmenarcheal. This study explored expectations concerning the paramenstrual changes of 1173 premenarcheal girls living in rural and urban areas of Mexico. In accordance with the findings of studies conducted in other countries, Mexican premenarcheal girls associate menstruation with a set of mostly negative expectations. A comparison of the results from urban and rural girls revealed that urban girls expected negative paramenstrual changes more, while rural ones expected positive changes more. These differences suggest that the cultures in which girls are brought up have an impact on their expectations. Urban girls are more exposed to media which present a picture of menses as a debilitating event, while rural girls link menses with health because it is associated with the ability to have children.

Keywords: Expectation; Menstruation; Mexico; Rural; health; Urban; health (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2003
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