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Menstrual Leave: Extra 3 days paid leave a month for Italian women may become law

Has anyone else seen this...?


Italy might soon become the first Western country with an official “menstrual leave” policy for working women. The lower house of Italy’s parliament has started discussing a draft law that, if approved, will mandate companies to grant three days of paid leave each month to female employees who experience painful periods. “It has been shown that women who suffer severe pain during their period are much less productive in these days,” said Simonetta Rubinato, a politician who put the law forward with three other female lawmakers. “Recognising their right to be absent from work during that time means they will be much more productive when they return.


Some fear that the law might backfire, penalising women in a country where they are already struggling to participate in the workforce. If women were granted extra days of paid leave, wrote Lorenza Pleuteri in Donna Moderna, a women’s magazine, “employers could become even more oriented to hire men rather than women”.


Italy has one of the lowest rates of female participation in the workforce in Europe. Only 61 percent of Italian women work, well below the European average of 72 per cent. This is due in part to employers’ reluctance to hire women and retain them after they become mothers. According to a report by ISTAT, Italy's national bureau of statistics, almost one-fourth of pregnant workers are fired during or right after their pregnancies – even though doing so is illegal.


Menstrual leave has been a legal right for Japanese women since 1947, but fear of social stigma means many will not take it. “If you take menstrual leave, you’re basically broadcasting to the entire office which days of the month you have your period,” said Kyoko, a professional woman in her 30s, who asked for her real name to be withheld. “It’s not the sort of thing you want to share with male colleagues, and it could lead to sexual harassment.


Some UK companies are also starting to offer this policy. Read more: 





Would be interested to hear thoughts on this. Is this a step towards equality and greater flexible working policies or a step backwards by marking women as incapable 3 days a month? Would you be comfortable with your colleagues (and possibly your clients) knowing your personal bodily functions? Would extra time off cause resentment from male colleagues/managers? Or from female colleagues/managers who choose not to take it? Would the potential for women to take extra days off mean employers would be less likely to hire/promote women in the first place?
Parents
  • Don't get me wrong, I fully appreciate the trials and tribulations of being a woman and how much pain we have to endure on a monthly basis (you're assuming I have an easy time of it when in fact having an allergy to anti-inflamatory medication means I can't take the standard painkillers for that type of pain) but my irritation is and always has been the fact that there have been generations of women fighting for our recognition as equal partners in this game of gender and yet we are still asking for 'special treatment' due to being a woman. If we want equality, there should be a level playing field on both sides of the argument.


    As Abi ( Abimbola Akanwo-Hood‍) says, we ALL have medical issues and problems that we have to deal with on a daily basis so why should women be allowed to take what is, in effect, an extra 36 days paid leave a year 'no questions asked' when our male counterparts cannot?

Reply
  • Don't get me wrong, I fully appreciate the trials and tribulations of being a woman and how much pain we have to endure on a monthly basis (you're assuming I have an easy time of it when in fact having an allergy to anti-inflamatory medication means I can't take the standard painkillers for that type of pain) but my irritation is and always has been the fact that there have been generations of women fighting for our recognition as equal partners in this game of gender and yet we are still asking for 'special treatment' due to being a woman. If we want equality, there should be a level playing field on both sides of the argument.


    As Abi ( Abimbola Akanwo-Hood‍) says, we ALL have medical issues and problems that we have to deal with on a daily basis so why should women be allowed to take what is, in effect, an extra 36 days paid leave a year 'no questions asked' when our male counterparts cannot?

Children
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