Share your experience with periods in our 2024 Bloody Big Survey and help us advocate for change.
If the survey below is having issues loading please click here to be taken to the survey directly.
Help us by sharing the survey on your socials!
The data we need
to advocate for the change we deserve.
Share the Dignity has committed to running the Bloody Big Survey every three years to monitor the changing attitudes and experiences of periods in Australia.
2024 marks our second Bloody Big Survey, in which we will be analysing the physical, social and financial impacts of menstruation and whether period poverty rates have risen since 2021.
Help Us Spread The Word!
There's a real lack of data when it comes to Menstruation. In order to advocate for change we need as many people as possible to share their experience. Use these assets to help us get the word out and encourage the menstruators in your life to be a part of this legacy.
Social post #1:
External social post #2:
Help end period poverty in just 5 minutes
Get Your Organisation Involved!
The 2024 Bloody Big Survey will allow us to see if attitudes or experiences have changed over the last 3 years and enable us to continue to advocate for change with evidence-based data. The survey will be open from March to May 2024.
Upon completion of this form you will be part of ensuring menstrual equity here in Australia. We will be in touch shortly and will provide all of the tools needed to help create the change. Together we are stronger!
Thank you to the following organisations for supporting the 2024 Bloody Big Survey
Sick of Period Shame & Stigma?
2021 Bloody Big Survey
A Quick Overview
Find out how period poverty effects Australians in our 2021 Bloody Big Survey Report
Read the 2021 results!
Pop your details down below and we'll send the 2021 Bloody Big Survey report straight to your email address!
About the 2021 report
The Bloody Big Survey was run online using Typeform software and was comprised of 28 questions. It was conducted from 1 March to 31 May 2021, with a total of 125,205 respondents. The data was cleansed and analysed by the dedicated team at WhyHive, and the analysis was written by Dr Jane Connory of Swinburne University of Technology.
The average respondent was a woman aged between 32 and 40 who lived in Victoria, worked full-time and identified as non-religious.