Tsuno Organic Cotton Tampons - Regular
Tsuno's impact is so impressive that any introduction on Goods 4 Good that is dedicated to celebrating Social Enterprises HAS to mention that they have just donated $40,356 to their One Girl Charity and donated 17,435 of period products through their matching donation model for the 23/24 financial year. More information under "Impact" below.
Tsuno Organic Cotton Regular Tampons:
- Suitable for medium flow - approximately 11g absorbency
- 16 tampons per box
- Made from 100% GOTS certified organic cotton
- Chlorine and dioxin bleach free
- Recyclable FSC certified cardboard packaging
- GOTS- Global Organic Textile Standard
- FSC- Forest Stewardship Council
Impact
Tsuno donates 50% of their profits to fund girl's education and menstrual health support. Right now 130 million girls around the world aren’t in school, simply because they were born a girl. Tsuno is proud to support One Girl, a non-profit organisation that harnesses the power of education to drive change for girls in Sierra Leone and Uganda. Education is the key to eliminating gender inequality, to reducing poverty, and to creating a sustainable planet.
The empowerment of women in the form of the education of girls in the developing world holds among the greatest hopes as a driver of the eradication of extreme poverty; pulling close to a billion people from extreme hunger, lack of health care, gender inequality and vulnerability to environmental fragility on to the first rung of development, allowing for the greatest means of social mobility.
Additionally, you can donate period products here and Tsuno will match that donation. They donate to a number of Australian charities supporting people experiencing homelessness or those seeking asylum. Each charity has a story and a mission we whole-heartedly support - because everyone deserves to menstruate with dignity.
The ethical gifts by the Australian Social Enterprises here tackle some big issues. Your purchase helps them work with charities who are experts in the field and they make a difference in the space of empowering and rescuing women, improving human health, reusing items that would have otherwise gone into landfill, providing work and helping people break out of the cycle of poverty.