Peer Review History

Original SubmissionJanuary 4, 2022
Decision Letter - Alison Parker, Editor

PONE-D-22-00234"It's not a luxury to prevent having blood run down your legs". The experiences and perceptions of period poverty among impoverished women in an inner-city area of Northwest England.PLOS ONE

Dear Dr. Mason,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript to PLOS ONE. After careful consideration, we feel that it has merit but does not fully meet PLOS ONE’s publication criteria as it currently stands. Therefore, we invite you to submit a revised version of the manuscript that addresses the points raised during the review process. The reviewers have provided some minor comments which nevertheless require careful attention, particulalry on supplying the underlying data.   But I think these should be straightfroward for you to complete.

Please submit your revised manuscript by Mar 12 2022 11:59PM. If you will need more time than this to complete your revisions, please reply to this message or contact the journal office at plosone@plos.org. When you're ready to submit your revision, log on to https://www.editorialmanager.com/pone/ and select the 'Submissions Needing Revision' folder to locate your manuscript file.

Please include the following items when submitting your revised manuscript:

  • A rebuttal letter that responds to each point raised by the academic editor and reviewer(s). You should upload this letter as a separate file labeled 'Response to Reviewers'.
  • A marked-up copy of your manuscript that highlights changes made to the original version. You should upload this as a separate file labeled 'Revised Manuscript with Track Changes'.
  • An unmarked version of your revised paper without tracked changes. You should upload this as a separate file labeled 'Manuscript'.
If you would like to make changes to your financial disclosure, please include your updated statement in your cover letter. Guidelines for resubmitting your figure files are available below the reviewer comments at the end of this letter.

If applicable, we recommend that you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io to enhance the reproducibility of your results. Protocols.io assigns your protocol its own identifier (DOI) so that it can be cited independently in the future. For instructions see: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/submission-guidelines#loc-laboratory-protocols. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option for publishing peer-reviewed Lab Protocol articles, which describe protocols hosted on protocols.io. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols.

We look forward to receiving your revised manuscript.

Kind regards,

Alison Parker

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Journal Requirements:

When submitting your revision, we need you to address these additional requirements.

1. Please ensure that your manuscript meets PLOS ONE's style requirements, including those for file naming. The PLOS ONE style templates can be found at 

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https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=ba62/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_title_authors_affiliations.pdf

2. Please review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the rebuttal letter that accompanies your revised manuscript. If you need to cite a retracted article, indicate the article’s retracted status in the References list and also include a citation and full reference for the retraction notice.

3. Thank you for stating the following in the Acknowledgments Section of your manuscript: 

"The research was supported by a UKRI ‘Enhancing place-based partnerships in public engagement’ grant."

We note that you have provided funding information that is not currently declared in your Funding Statement. However, funding information should not appear in the Acknowledgments section or other areas of your manuscript. We will only publish funding information present in the Funding Statement section of the online submission form. 

Please remove any funding-related text from the manuscript and let us know how you would like to update your Funding Statement. Currently, your Funding Statement reads as follows: 

"The study was funded by  UKRI ‘Enhancing place-based partnerships in public engagement’ grant. The grant holder was Professor P. Phillips-Howard. No grant number was provided by the funder. 

URL https://www.ukri.org/

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript."

Please include your amended statements within your cover letter; we will change the online submission form on your behalf.

4. In your Data Availability statement, you have not specified where the minimal data set underlying the results described in your manuscript can be found. PLOS defines a study's minimal data set as the underlying data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the manuscript and any additional data required to replicate the reported study findings in their entirety. All PLOS journals require that the minimal data set be made fully available. For more information about our data policy, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability.

Upon re-submitting your revised manuscript, please upload your study’s minimal underlying data set as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and include the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers within your revised cover letter. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories. Any potentially identifying patient information must be fully anonymized.

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We will update your Data Availability statement to reflect the information you provide in your cover letter.

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

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2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: N/A

Reviewer #2: N/A

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3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: Yes

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4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

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5. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: This is a well-evidenced report of a study investigating the realities of 'period poverty' for women in a city of England. the use of illustrative quotes is sound. It's a shame that the sample size is relatively small due to COVID-19, but I recommend publication as there is so little existing information on these experiences. I do however think that there are a few improvements that could be made to the manuscript in terms of being clearer, and providing some extra details in the Supporting Information; I have highlighted and noted these on a pdf of the manuscript. I don't think these are overly burdensome and I don't think the paper should be accepted until they have been addressed. They are all related to presenting the study more clearly; I don't have any issues with the study itself.

No Supporting Information has been provided as far as I can tell, can these please be made available to reviewers if this paper goes for another round of reviews (I understand this may be the system's, not the authors', fault)? I answered 'No' to Q3 above because I have not seen the data/there is no DOI provided in the manuscript, but the authors do state that "all data are fully available without restriction" and "All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files."

Reviewer #2: I would suggest dramatically reducing the length of your paper's title. It is quite unwieldy. If you insist on using the quote, consider using it as a subtitle, not the primary title.

Also you need at least a paragraph explaining your decision (a perfectly valid one) to refer to "women and girls" instead of "individuals who menstruate," "menstruators," or "women, girls and other individuals who menstruate."

There are some relevant sources the authors have overlooked:

(1) PLAN INTERNATIONAL, PERIODS IN A PANDEMIC: MENSTRUAL HYGIENE MANAGEMENT IN THE TIME OF COVID-19 (2020)

(2) Chris Bobel & Breanne Fahs, From Bloodless Respectability to Radical Menstrual Embodiment: Shifting Menstrual Politics from Private to Public, 45 SIGNS 955 (2020) (for discussion of "menstruators" vs. "women and girls")

(3) Anne Siebert Kuhlman, Unmet Menstrual Hygiene Needs Among Low-Income Women doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000003060

(4) Crawford & Waldman, Period Poverty in a Pandemic, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3692802

(5) Any mention of Scotland's adoption of national legislation providing free menstrual products

You might consider, although this is the weakest of my recommendations, engaging more robustly (in two or three more paragraphs) with the existing literature on period poverty. Some important scholarship has been overlooked.

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6. PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: Yes: Dani Barrington

Reviewer #2: No

[NOTE: If reviewer comments were submitted as an attachment file, they will be attached to this email and accessible via the submission site. Please log into your account, locate the manuscript record, and check for the action link "View Attachments". If this link does not appear, there are no attachment files.]

While revising your submission, please upload your figure files to the Preflight Analysis and Conversion Engine (PACE) digital diagnostic tool, https://pacev2.apexcovantage.com/. PACE helps ensure that figures meet PLOS requirements. To use PACE, you must first register as a user. Registration is free. Then, login and navigate to the UPLOAD tab, where you will find detailed instructions on how to use the tool. If you encounter any issues or have any questions when using PACE, please email PLOS at figures@plos.org. Please note that Supporting Information files do not need this step.

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: PONE-D-22-00234_reviewer.pdf
Revision 1

Please see response to reviewers letter uploaded:

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Response to Reviewers 5May.docx
Decision Letter - Alison Parker, Editor

PONE-D-22-00234R1Period Poverty: The perceptions and experiences of impoverished women living an inner-city area of Northwest EnglandPLOS ONE

Dear Dr. Mason,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript to PLOS ONE. After careful consideration, we feel that it has merit but does not fully meet PLOS ONE’s publication criteria as it currently stands. Therefore, we invite you to submit a revised version of the manuscript that addresses the points raised during the review process. This manuscript is very close to acceptance now, just a few very minor changes requested by one of the reviewers.

Please submit your revised manuscript by Jun 26 2022 11:59PM. If you will need more time than this to complete your revisions, please reply to this message or contact the journal office at plosone@plos.org. When you're ready to submit your revision, log on to https://www.editorialmanager.com/pone/ and select the 'Submissions Needing Revision' folder to locate your manuscript file.

Please include the following items when submitting your revised manuscript:

  • A rebuttal letter that responds to each point raised by the academic editor and reviewer(s). You should upload this letter as a separate file labeled 'Response to Reviewers'.
  • A marked-up copy of your manuscript that highlights changes made to the original version. You should upload this as a separate file labeled 'Revised Manuscript with Track Changes'.
  • An unmarked version of your revised paper without tracked changes. You should upload this as a separate file labeled 'Manuscript'.
If you would like to make changes to your financial disclosure, please include your updated statement in your cover letter. Guidelines for resubmitting your figure files are available below the reviewer comments at the end of this letter.

If applicable, we recommend that you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io to enhance the reproducibility of your results. Protocols.io assigns your protocol its own identifier (DOI) so that it can be cited independently in the future. For instructions see: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/submission-guidelines#loc-laboratory-protocols. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option for publishing peer-reviewed Lab Protocol articles, which describe protocols hosted on protocols.io. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols.

We look forward to receiving your revised manuscript.

Kind regards,

Alison Parker

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Journal Requirements:

Please review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the rebuttal letter that accompanies your revised manuscript. If you need to cite a retracted article, indicate the article’s retracted status in the References list and also include a citation and full reference for the retraction notice.

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. If the authors have adequately addressed your comments raised in a previous round of review and you feel that this manuscript is now acceptable for publication, you may indicate that here to bypass the “Comments to the Author” section, enter your conflict of interest statement in the “Confidential to Editor” section, and submit your "Accept" recommendation.

Reviewer #1: (No Response)

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2. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

**********

3. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: N/A

**********

4. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: Yes

**********

5. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

**********

6. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: Thanks for the opportunity to re-review this paper. I reviewed the version I was sent by email on 10th May, a Word document titled 'Revised Manuscript with tracked changes'. I read this alongside the original version I commented on and noted that not all changes between versions had been tracked. So I'm hoping I did comment on the correct version/the authors just forgot to turn 'Tracked Changes' on for some of the revisions.

Overall, I still think the paper is great, but I have a few small suggestions, which I've annotated (including some typos, I know PLOS One doesn't send proofs to authors so wanted to flag them for you now so they don't make it through to the other end). The only comment on there that I think needs proper 'consideration' (I don't think other stuff is 'controversial', it's mostly grammatical) is around the use of the Bobel and Fahs quote in the Discussion - you suggest your work is at odds with the quote, but I disagree, in fact, your work provides the evidence their quote asks for.

Looking forward to seeing this published!

**********

7. PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: Yes: Dani Barrington

[NOTE: If reviewer comments were submitted as an attachment file, they will be attached to this email and accessible via the submission site. Please log into your account, locate the manuscript record, and check for the action link "View Attachments". If this link does not appear, there are no attachment files.]

While revising your submission, please upload your figure files to the Preflight Analysis and Conversion Engine (PACE) digital diagnostic tool, https://pacev2.apexcovantage.com/. PACE helps ensure that figures meet PLOS requirements. To use PACE, you must first register as a user. Registration is free. Then, login and navigate to the UPLOAD tab, where you will find detailed instructions on how to use the tool. If you encounter any issues or have any questions when using PACE, please email PLOS at figures@plos.org. Please note that Supporting Information files do not need this step.

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Revised Manuscript with tracked changes Rev.pdf
Revision 2

Dear Alison Parker

Thank you very much for reviewing our paper, ‘Period Poverty: The perceptions and experiences of impoverished women living an inner-city area of Northwest England’ again.

We wish to think Reviewer 1 for taking the time to provide such meticulous feedback. It has been very helpful indeed and hopefully we have done justice to her efforts to improve our paper.

All grammatical suggestions have been addressed (we have not itemised in this response), and having been alerted to errors we have, in addition, incorporated suggestions from a proof-reader. There are two issues we provide detail on.

1) The suggestion to group the US studies versus other studies was attempted on an early draft for the very reasons outlined by Reviewer 1. However, in doing this the narrative became quite complicated. We reverted to a narrative that groups studies by method and findings, which does require mention of the geography of each study, but overall reads, in our opinion, more straightforwardly.

2) We understand the point made regarding our original response to the Bobel and Fahs article. On re-reading we now agree that Bobel and Fahs were arguing the need for more evidence before assertions are made. Our study helps in providing additional insight to the topic and we now have clarified this point. “A dominant theme emerging from our study concerned affordability of menstrual products. We found our participants believed better access to products would have a significant influence on their lives. Bobel and Fahs [22] asserted that “It is troubling that activists assert the power of products to impact lives when the research base for these interventions, thus far, is thin” (p975). Our study has provided further evidence indicating the importance of product affordability for vulnerable women, which is likely to become even more critical within the UK given the current economic crisis”

We apologise for the loss of some track changes in the previous version sent which we appreciate must have made this more difficult and time consuming to check our amendments. Unfortunately, we have been unable to highlight this last set of track changes in a different format, which would have made it easier to check and we thank you for your patience.

We hope this response meets with your and the reviewers approval.

Best wishes,

Linda Mason

Senior Research Fellow

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, L3 5QA, Liverpool,

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Response to Reviewers 17May.docx
Decision Letter - Alison Parker, Editor

Period Poverty: The perceptions and experiences of impoverished women living an inner-city area of Northwest England

PONE-D-22-00234R2

Dear Dr. Mason,

We’re pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been judged scientifically suitable for publication and will be formally accepted for publication once it meets all outstanding technical requirements.

Within one week, you’ll receive an e-mail detailing the required amendments. When these have been addressed, you’ll receive a formal acceptance letter and your manuscript will be scheduled for publication.

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If your institution or institutions have a press office, please notify them about your upcoming paper to help maximize its impact. If they’ll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team as soon as possible -- no later than 48 hours after receiving the formal acceptance. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information, please contact onepress@plos.org.

Kind regards,

Alison Parker

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Additional Editor Comments (optional):

Reviewers' comments:

Formally Accepted
Acceptance Letter - Alison Parker, Editor

PONE-D-22-00234R2

Period Poverty: The perceptions and experiences of impoverished women living in an inner-city area of Northwest England

Dear Dr. Mason:

I'm pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been deemed suitable for publication in PLOS ONE. Congratulations! Your manuscript is now with our production department.

If your institution or institutions have a press office, please let them know about your upcoming paper now to help maximize its impact. If they'll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team within the next 48 hours. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information please contact onepress@plos.org.

If we can help with anything else, please email us at plosone@plos.org.

Thank you for submitting your work to PLOS ONE and supporting open access.

Kind regards,

PLOS ONE Editorial Office Staff

on behalf of

Dr. Alison Parker

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

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