“…Several participants indicated resource limitations related to sourcing menstrual materials [8-10, 37, 40, 48, 56, 81, 98, 106, 114, 117, 119, 120, 126, 143] or having access to an adequate place to regularly change menstrual materials, clean themselves during menstruation, or dispose of menstrual materials [10,25,26,28,47,51,54,78,80,81,88,94,106,108,111,115,117,120,122,126,132,138]. Resource limitations were most prominent for participants receiving low incomes or who were part of marginalised, lower-socioeconomic groups [9,10,37,48,62,65,126,132], sometimes also experiencing homelessness [9,10,37,126,132]. These sub-populations have often not been included in qualitative studies of menstrual experiences in HICs, with the earliest study to purposefully recruit low income participants being published in 2007 [62], and those experiencing homelessness in 2017 [9].…”