below, krista banasiak, manager of research and public policy at diabetes canada, discusses the stigma of type 2 diabetes and the impact it can have on canadians, including her mom, who lives with the disease.
“blame-the-victim” thinking
the first thing my mom does when she wakes every morning is test her blood sugar. from there, her day is full of activities intended to ensure she stays healthy: she follows a strict diet, exercises, tests her blood sugar, and takes medication. she also checks her calendar regularly to ensure visits to her doctor are scheduled to have her feet and eyes examined.
my mom lives with
type 2 diabetes (t2d) and does all this in hopes of avoiding the complications of the disease, such as vision loss, foot or leg amputation, nerve damage, and heart disease. but there’s one complication that she can do little to avoid—the mental health toll of stigma.
while some people with obesity do have diabetes, many more do not. many people who exercise regularly, eat nutritious food and are otherwise health conscious, develop t2d, despite their healthy habits. in fact, there is a strong
genetic link to the disease. a
family history of t2d greatly increases the chance of developing it.