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Home » How Kano’s Community Effort Expands SRHR Access for Adolescent Girls
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How Kano’s Community Effort Expands SRHR Access for Adolescent Girls

Editor1By Editor1November 9, 2025
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GIRLCHILD

By Khadija Abdullahi Yahaya

In the dusty alleys of Kumbotso, a crowded suburb of Kano, 15-year-old Aisha clutches a tattered notebook, her eyes bright with newfound confidence. Just a year ago, she hid her menstrual cramps from her family, enduring pain in silence because no one had taught her about menstruation or where to seek help.

“My auntie said it was shameful to talk about periods,” she says, sitting on a plastic chair in the shaded courtyard of Government Girls Secondary School in Kwa. “I’d sneak rags from the market, miss school for days, and worry I was sick without knowing why.”

Aisha’s experience highlights a deeper crisis in Kano, Nigeria’s northern hub of over 15 million: limited access to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) information and services, compounded by cultural silence that leaves girls uninformed, vulnerable, and unable to seek care.

Kano bears the brunt of Nigeria’s SRHR access gaps. A 2020 study found 66% of adolescents skipped reproductive health services due to stigma, lack of knowledge, or fear of judgment. Nationally, 43% of girls marry before 18—in Kano, over 50%—often without understanding contraception, consent, or risks like obstetric fistula and maternal death.

Poverty exacerbates this: families prioritize early marriage to reduce economic burdens, while distant clinics, absent female providers, and gatekeeping by husbands or in-laws block services. Recent insecurity from kidnappings heightens parental fears, further isolating girls from SRHR resources.

These barriers interlock, denying girls critical information on their bodies and rights, perpetuating cycles of poor health and lost opportunities.

READ ALSO: Child Marriage: What Kano Needs To Stop 3 Of 4 Girls Dropping Out Of Secondary Schools

Yet, Kano’s communities are tackling this head-on with culturally rooted solutions: engaging traditional leaders to normalize SRHR discussions, delivering doorstep services and kits, and using creative programs to build knowledge.

Central to these efforts is education—keeping girls in school to provide structured SRHR learning, directly addressing the information void that fuels vulnerability.

The Core Problem: Silence and Inaccessibility in SRHR

In Kano’s conservative Hausa-Fulani communities, SRHR topics like menstruation, contraception, and consent are shrouded in taboos, labeled un-Islamic or inappropriate. Girls like Aisha grow up without basic knowledge: many believe bleeding signals impurity or illness, unaware of hygiene or pain management.

This lack of information drives absenteeism—girls miss up to five school days monthly—and health risks, as uninformed teens face higher rates of unintended pregnancies and STIs.

Access to services is equally dire. Rural clinics in areas like Rano are 5 kilometers away, often lacking female staff or privacy. Married girls need spousal permission for visits, and stigma deters unmarried ones. A Society for Family Health (SFH) report notes that only 15% of adolescent girls in northern Nigeria access formal SRH counseling annually. Early marriage amplifies this: child brides, 23% less likely to complete secondary school, rarely receive SRHR education, entering adulthood without tools to protect their health or rights.

READ ALSO: Kano Compulsory Education: Myth Or Reality As Schoolgirls Clean Cars During School Hours

These gaps stem from intertwined cultural, economic, and logistical barriers, but solutions are emerging by meeting girls where they are—starting with education as a foundational response.

Education as a Direct Response to SRHR Information Gaps

Recognizing that lack of knowledge is the root issue, programs prioritize school enrollment to deliver age-appropriate SRHR education in safe spaces. The World Bank’s Adolescent Girls’ Initiative for Learning and Empowerment (AGILE), launched in 2020 with $500 million, targets this by upgrading infrastructure and incentivizing attendance, explicitly integrating SRHR curricula.

Traditional leaders bridge cultural divides. Alhaji Ibrahim Abdulkadir, Emir of Gaya, frames SRHR education as an Islamic imperative: “Knowledge of one’s body honors Allah and prevents harm,” he says in palace forums.

In Kwa, district head Mallam Tijani Dawanau convinced 200 families to enroll daughters by highlighting how informed girls avoid health crises. AGILE’s cash transfers—covering books, transport, and sanitary pads—remove economic hurdles, enabling consistent school access where SRHR lessons occur.

The results are measurable. In AGILE states including Kano, girl-child enrollment jumped from 900,000 to 1.6 million in three years, with SRHR modules reaching 60% of participants. Dropout rates halved in project zones, and menstrual-related absenteeism fell 30% after schools distributed free pads via School-Based Management Committees (SBMCs).

READ ALSO: Hookup Linked To Most Cases Of Missing Girls, Ritual Killings- Police

In Kumbotso, SBMC leader Amina Sani’s efforts ensured girls like 16-year-old Rumasa’u from Ungogo stayed enrolled: “The scholarship bought pads, but classes taught me about my cycle. Now I’m top of my class and share facts with friends.”

Doorstep Services and Creative Tools to Bridge Access Gaps

To reach out-of-school or married girls, initiatives bypass clinics with mobile and community-based delivery. SFH’s mobile units in Kano’s rural zones provide counseling, contraceptives, and check-ups at doorsteps, training female facilitators to build trust.

In Rano, Hajia Maimuna of SWODEN distributes SRH kits—pads, soap, painkillers, and info pamphlets—while engaging husbands in discussions led by community figures like Halima Yusuf. “We explain how SRHR knowledge saves families from medical costs,” she says. Pilot areas saw a 15% rise in married teens utilizing services, with privacy and proximity key.

Creative programs make SRHR relatable and fun. Nigeria Health Watch’s Furanni initiative in Ghari LGA uses embroidery to teach hygiene: 15-year-old Hafsat stitches menstrual charts, saying, “I thought bleeding was a curse.

Now I educate my sisters.” USAID’s SKILLZ United in Dawakin Tofa blends soccer with lessons on consent and contraception; 17-year-old Rahma notes, “The field taught me boundaries for my body.” Since 2021, SKILLZ trained 842 youth leaders, reaching 66,000 teens (60% girls) with SRHR info.

Tangible Results from Targeted Solutions

These efforts yield clear outcomes. Since 2020, Kano’s girl-child enrollment rose 20%, directly boosting SRHR exposure—teen maternal health visits increased 12%, and informed contraceptive use among adolescents grew 18% in program areas.

READ ALSO: Kano Emirate Bans Withdrawal Of Girls From School For Marriage

Aisha now leads Furanni sessions, drawing cycles on chalkboards: “Classes gave me the words I needed.” Zainab, 14 and formerly married at 13, returned via AGILE incentives and accesses counseling. Rumasa’u, Hafsat, and Rahma report fewer health fears and bolder futures.

Challenges persist—weak child marriage enforcement and insecurity—but expanded AGILE funding ($700 million) aims to reach 8.6 million girls by 2027. Emir Abdulkadir affirms: “SRHR access is our daughters’ right under faith and law.”

In Kano’s compounds and classrooms, girls are claiming their health. “Information and services are my power,” Aisha declares, notebook brimming with dreams—doctor, advocate, leader. “We’re building them, one step at a time.”

“This story is made possible with support from Nigeria Health Watch as part of the Solutions Journalism Africa Initiative.”

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