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Unicef launches period tracker app for girls in Kenya

To reach most girls, the app functions offline, allowing girls to use all Oky's features

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by The Star

News30 May 2023 - 10:22
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In Summary


• Oky Kenya provides girls with appropriate and evidence-based information about their periods in fun, creative and positive ways.

• Oky is also being customised to other countries, including Burundi, South Africa and Tanzania.

Kisumu governor's wife Dorothy Nyong’o and county water executive and Kiwasco head of corporate affairs Eldah Odongo during Menstrual Hygiene Day celebrations at Nanga Primary School.

Menstruation is a normal process in the life of every woman, yet is often shrouded in secrecy and shame.

Some 9.3 million women and girls of reproductive age in Kenya experience menstruation.

Girls are increasingly searching online for important questions about their menstrual health but are not always getting the correct information.

In response to this challenge, Unicef has launched ‘Oky Kenya’, an adapted version of the world’s first-period tracker offline app, specifically designed for girls living in low- and middle-income countries such as Kenya.

Unicef supported the adaptation of Oky to provide information about menstruation tailored to the Kenyan context, in partnership with LVCT Health, the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education.

LVCT Health led the country adaptation and user design workshops with adolescent girls in western, central and coastal Kenya, and also engaged adolescent girls as key advisers, peer ambassadors and mobilisers.

“One of the main reasons girls are in search of information about menstruation is to dispel myths and misconceptions that often lead to anxiety, fear and shame,” Unicef Representative to Kenya Shaheen Nilofer said.

“I would like to congratulate Oky Kenya for developing an innovative app for Kenyan girls, by Kenyan girls. This will help to break barriers and empower girls to take control of their own health and ultimately life.”

Providing information about menstruation is critical for promoting gender equality and helping girls feel comfortable with the changes that they go through while still leading active lives.

In many rural settings and informal settlements, especially where there is limited clean water and sanitation, menstruation can act as a barrier to girls' education, with girls missing school due to lack of access to sanitary products or fear of embarrassment. 

Oky Kenya provides girls with appropriate and evidence-based information about their periods in fun, creative and positive ways, delivered straight into their hands through the tools they use every day — mobile phones.

Its features include individualised period cycle trackers and calendars, tips, and menstruation information. Girls have been decision-makers in the design of this app throughout the entire design process.

To reach the most girls, the app functions offline, allowing girls to use all of Oky's features and taking up little storage space on mobile devices.

It is designed to work on lower-end smartphones, is compatible with older software and is entirely free, without advertisements.

Furthering its mission to be accessible and inclusive, the app also has read-out functionality so girls with lower levels of literacy or vision impairment can obtain reliable menstrual health information.

Available for Android, Oky Kenya can be downloaded from Google Play in English and Kiswahili in Kenya.

It will soon be available in iPhone and tablet format.

Oky is also being customised to other countries, including Burundi, South Africa and Tanzania.

The information provided by the Oky Kenya app helps to remove these barriers and promote gender equality in education.

This, in turn, can have a ripple effect on wider society, as educated girls and women are more likely to participate in the workforce, make informed decisions about their health, understand their options for family planning, and contribute to their communities.

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