Small Pads, Big Dreams: Blandine Umuziranenge’s KosmoPads Empower 54K African Girls

Peng Boris Akebuon
Meli Imelda
TCA Team
April 27, 2025

I woke up bleeding and realized a magazine article wouldn’t stop girls skipping maths.
Blandine Umuziranenge, reflecting on the moment KosmoPads was born

Imagine missing class every month simply because you bleed. For roughly 18 percent of girls in Rwanda—nearly one in five—that was reality. Families stretched every franc to cover food, rent, and school fees; menstrual products were a luxury. The result? Girls absent, grades slipping, dreams deferred. But former IT specialist turned social entrepreneur Blandine Umuziranenge refused to accept that loss as fate. From launching a humble health magazine in Kigali to founding Kosmotive and its flagship innovation KosmoPads, Blandine is rewiring the narrative around menstruation in Africa—one reusable pad at a time.

Period Poverty: A Barrier to Education and Dignity

Period poverty” may sound clinical, but its consequences are painfully human. In sub-Saharan Africa:

  • 128 million girls miss school monthly for lack of products.
  • Absenteeism contributes directly to dropout rates, especially during critical exam years.
  • Disposable pads burden families: at $5 per pack, they’re simply unaffordable for many.

Beyond budgets, disposables carry hidden costs. Each pad can take 500–800 years to decompose, releasing microplastics into soil and waterways. Rural communities already struggling with waste management find piles of sanitary trash mounting in backyards, health centers, and forests. In short, the status quo leaves girls out of school, households out of pocket, and the planet out of patience.

From Magazine Pages to Sewing Machines

Blandine Umuziranenge Sewing Reusable KosmoPads
Blandine Umuziranenge Sewing Reusable KosmoPads — Image from lionessesofafrica.com

Blandine’s path wasn’t paved with textiles. Armed with a degree in mathematics and experience in IT and media, she launched Kosmos Magazine in 2014 to share reproductive and child-health information. She wrote about pregnancy, breastfeeding—and, one day, about a deeply personal experience: bleeding through the only pad she had.



I was so embarrassed I missed half a day,” she recalls. “Publishing that story made me realize raising awareness wasn’t enough. I had to build a solution.




By 2018, after years of research and prototyping, Blandine shifted full-time into menstrual health. Drawing on her IT skills, she set up an e-commerce platform; tapping into her magazine’s network, she recruited tailors and educators. What started with three sewing machines grew into a production line capable of 5 000 pads per day—the groundwork for a true social enterprise.

KosmoPads 101: The Triple-Win Sanitary Pad

KosmoPads aren’t your grandmother’s rags nor the slick disposables hawked on TV. They’re engineered for affordability, comfort, and sustainability:

Cost-Cutting Design

  • $5 per pack, lasting two years.
  • 88 percent savings over disposables—like trading four school lunches for two years of worry-free cycles.

Health-First Fabrics

  • Breathable, toxin-free layers avoid the itch and mystery perfumes typical of disposables.
  • Allergy-friendly materials make them a go-to for women with skin sensitivities.

Circular-Economy Endgame

  • After 120 washes, pads return to Kosmotive for recycling.
  • Old textiles become furniture stuffing instead of landfill fodder.

As Blandine likes to joke, KosmoPads contain “fewer chemicals than your average DIY perfume kit,” but deliver far more peace of mind.

Slashing Stigma—One Poem, One High-Five at a Time



In cultures where “period” lurks in whispers, selling washable pads requires more than a sales pitch—it demands a movement:

  • Poetry-Powered Campaigns
    On Menstrual Hygiene Day, Kosmotive stages slam-poetry nights. Verses like “Blood Isn’t Budgeted” coax teenage boys out of their comfort zones and into solidarity, snapping fingers in chorus rather than sneer.
  • Boys as Allies
    Workshops recruit “potential bullies” into menstrual champions: “Dude, periods are normal—just chill,” became a campus catchphrase after one session.
  • Selfie Stations
    Factory tours culminate in a photo wall emblazoned with “Freak out seasonally, not monthly,” complete with whimsical props and a permission slip to laugh.

These creative stunts aren’t mere gimmicks—they rewire mindsets. Today, girls feel comfortable discussing cramps over social-media memes, and fathers even ask where to buy their daughters’ next pack.

Tech to the Rescue: The KosmoHealth Ecosystem

Blandine didn’t abandon her IT roots when she picked up a needle. Instead, she wove technology into the enterprise’s fabric:

KosmoHealth App

  • Cycle tracking with gentle reminders—no more pop-quiz surprises.
  • AI-powered chat for private health advice at 2 a.m., because cramps don’t check office hours.
  • Integrated shop for pads, maternity wear, and self-care bundles.

Digital Magazine & Telehealth

  • Kosmos Magazine continues in print and online, sharing articles on menopause, sexual health, and beyond.
  • A telehealth helpline connects users to nurses and counselors, bridging gaps where clinics are miles away.

For policymakers, anonymized usage data maps absenteeism and product uptake—evidence that a modest pad subsidy can yield outsized education gains.

From Seed Capital to Social Capital: The Funding Rollercoaster


Fall in love with the problem, not the solution,” says Blandine. “The solution can change; the problem stays.


That philosophy sustained her through hundreds of grant applications and rejection letters. Key milestones included:

  • 2017: Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Program alumna—seed capital and mentorship.
  • 2019: Youth Connekt Africa “Girls in Innovation” Award & Invest2Impact Women’s Empowerment Prize.
  • 2020–21: €200 000 grant from King Baudouin Foundation’s Business Partnership Facility, enabling industrial sewing machines and rural co-op partnerships.
  • 2021: Named among the Top 50 African Business Heroes.
  • 2023–24: Finalist in global competitions (WE Empower UN SDG Challenge, Waislitz Global Citizen Award) and winner of the Bayer Women Empowerment Award.

Each accolade brought cash, credibility, and connections—transforming one-woman passion into a continent-spanning campaign.

Measuring Impact: Numbers That Tell a Story



Kosmotive tracks metrics like a startup and a social project rolled into one:

  • 54 000+ girls now attend school uninterrupted during their periods.
  • 25 direct employees, plus dozens of rural co-op tailors empowered with fair wages.
  • 5 000 pads/day production capacity keeps factories humming.
  • Millions of plastic bags worth of waste prevented, thanks to two-year pad lifespans.

Yet the true victories live in YouTube testimonials: shy girls turned confident speakers, parents breathing easier, teachers celebrating full attendance. For Blandine, those voices matter more than any spreadsheet.

Sewing the Next Chapter: Scaling Across Africa

Rwanda was just the runway. Kosmotive’s expansion blueprint:

Local Partnerships

  • Ship sewing kits and training materials to women’s co-ops in Kenya, DRC, Zimbabwe—and soon Cameroon.
  • Empower community champions who know local customs and languages.

Franchise-Lite Model

  • License brand and quality-control protocols rather than set up foreign factories.
  • Maintain centralized design and digital support to ensure every pad passes the same performance tests.

Policy & Distribution Allies

  • Collaborate with schools, NGOs, and ministries to bulk-purchase pads at subsidized rates.
  • Advocate for tax exemptions on menstrual products and inclusion of hygiene education in curricula.

By weaving local leadership with pan-African ambition, Blandine aims to reach 3.7 million women and prevent 1.5 billion disposable pads—equivalent to 3,600 tons of plastic—from being tossed into landfills.

Wisdom from the Factory Floor

As our conversation wound down through traffic jams and T-shirt fittings, Blandine shared parting advice for women entrepreneurs:


You’re the one you’ve been waiting for—so go build your dream. But remember, you can have it all… just maybe not all at once.




She urges seekers to fall in love with the problem, assemble a rock-solid network, and stay resilient when “No” becomes a familiar tune. After all, creating social impact means sometimes celebrating small wins when profits lag, knowing that transforming lives is its own reward.

Join the Movement: What You Can Do Today

  • Donate $5 for one KosmoPad pack—keep a girl in class next month.
  • Host a menstrual-hygiene poetry slam or art installation in your community.
  • Collaborate: Pitch Blandine your femtech idea; she’s always scouting innovations that smell like success.

Because when pads go reusable, stigma doesn’t stand a chance. Period.


Kosmopads Website

Kosmotive Website

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