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THE MUSEUM OF MENSTRUATION AND
WOMEN'S HEALTH
Sea Pearls menstrual sponge (2007),
U.S.A.)
(company Web
site)
Selections from the company literature
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Sea Pearls sponge and some literature from
2000.
This Web
site and museum do not endorse
this product, nor do they profit
in any way from it (except for the
gift of the sponge and
literature). It's simply
information for site visitors and
part of history.
Cleaning
sponges
Museum board
member and menstrual safety expert Dr.
Philip Tierno, Jr. wrote me in October
1999 about cleaning sponges:
Dear Harry,
Yes, indeed, soap and water will
not effectively clean the sea
sponge. The odor emanating from the
used and washed sponges represent
the action of surviving vaginal
bacteria and their degradation of
menstrual debris that survives the
wash. The only effective way to
sanitize those sponges is by boiling for about
5 to 10 minutes. This will
kill ALL bacteria there.
Interestingly, looking back in
history, women used to boil their
menstrual "rags"
to get them clean. This is an
analogous circumstance.
Best regards,
Phil
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NEXT: The
contemporary Gynotex
(from the Netherlands) menstrual sponge
The later Sea
Pearls (2007) (from the U.S.A.)
menstrual sponge
The contemporary Gynotex
(from the Netherlands) menstrual sponge
Cardboard
American sponge can with sponge.
Red can
with sponge. Black
can and sponge.
Beautiful
(Australian?) sponge can
with sponge lacking a net.
Anna Health Sponge
(U.S.A., 1940s?)
The contemporary Sea
Pearls (from the U.S.A.) menstrual
sponge
Main
sponge page
© 2007 Harry Finley. It is illegal to
reproduce or distribute any of the work on
this Web site in any manner or medium without
written permission of the
author. Please report suspected violations to hfinley@mum.org
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