We use cookies and other tracking technologies to provide services in line with the preferences you reveal while browsing the Website to show personalize content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audience is coming from in order to improve your browsing experience on our Website. By continuing to browse this Website, you consent to the use of these cookies. If you wish to object such processing, please read the instructions described in our Cookie Policy / Privacy Policy.
Interested in blogging for timesofindia.com? We will be happy to have you on board as a blogger, if you have the knack for writing. Just drop in a mail at toiblogs@timesinternet.in with a brief bio and we will get in touch with you.
Omar Sherief Mohammad, Cluster Head India, Middle East & Africa, RDC.
Access to diabetes care is one of the main reasons for its poor management in our country. One of the barriers that has been recognized is stigma and the role it plays in hampering diabetes management among people with diabetes. Studies in India and a substantial amount of global research show that people with diabetes face discrimination and isolation in several social situations. People with diabetes are often made to feel disabled, not capable of living a so-called ‘normal’ life. Some are even blamed for their condition, and their food habits are considered responsible for their disease. This largely happens because people with diabetes need to follow a special medical regimen and daily care routine in public.
Take the case of children with type 1 diabetes (T1D). Their treatment regime requires them to test their blood sugar during school hours, take their insulin shots on time and carry food appropriate to their condition. They come across as being ‘different’ and they are treated as such by their peers. As a result, these children, for no fault of theirs, develop a deep sense of isolation and discrimination. They feel ‘stigmatized’. According to studies that have explored this stigma that children and adolescents with T1D face, many of them struggle with self-esteem and body-image issues. It can affect their social relationships and can also have a deep impact on their education. What begins in childhood is often carried through into adulthood for people with T1D. Those who want to get married may face rejections because of their condition. At workplaces too, people who are seen taking the insulin injections might be considered incapable of certain tasks and excluded from important projects or not hired at all! The effect of this stigma is not limited to the patient but extends to those around them too. Parents of children with T1D also feel excluded by their friends and family because of their children’s special needs, which can have an impact on their mental health. An Indian study has established that social stigma related to T1D can lead to mental distress and depression in parents of children with T1D.
Research also shows that this stigma can affect the medical regimen of people with diabetes. They feel ashamed about monitoring their blood sugar level, taking their medications or insulin injections in public, or eating different food. Children rebel against the self-care practices required to keep their blood sugar under control. They skip their insulin doses or eat regular food with their peers, which can negatively affect their blood sugar level. This interferes with their therapy adherence and leads to severe complications such as kidney diseases, vision loss or nerve conditions at a younger age.
Therefore, the stigma of diabetes can negatively impact the social, emotional, and physical health of people with diabetes and their caregivers. To address this barrier to care, the discrimination needs to stop.
The ideal way to stop this is to bring about a shift in social behavior, but behavioral change is a long-term process and requires conscious commitment and persistence. Advocacy, education, and counseling are the important steps to drive this behavioral change. A collaborative effort between the government, private healthcare companies, and civil society is required.
Advocacy needs to start with evidence-building. Local data on stigma associated with diabetes is needed to demonstrate its impact on people with diabetes. This data can give further insights on the development of education and awareness programs and counseling interventions relevant to local communities. Measurement of the impact of these interventions is critical to their success and can guide policy development.
The education and awareness programs must start at the grassroot level with the training of Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs). They can in turn educate the community. Fun-&-learn programs at schools should provide information on T1D and its management. These programs can also demonstrate real life examples of adults leading a normal life with diabetes to make children see that their peers with T1D are not different from them. This will also motivate the children with T1D to not be embarrassed about their condition.
Research has shown that regular counseling for adults with diabetes, children with T1D, and their parents is important to help them cope with the stigma and discrimination. Civil society can partner with the government to provide these counseling services. Globally, the role of peer support groups has been well established to create a community of support that can help people with diabetes cope with their condition well. 13 14 15 Patient organizations can help arrange these support groups, which will facilitate sharing of experiences and ensure the emotional well-being of people with diabetes.
Community mobilization is required to end the stigma associated with diabetes. I believe that awareness on this issue cannot be created in isolation but requires the support of a larger ecosystem. There are currently about 74 million people living with diabetes in India and this figure in on the rise. Conscious effort needs to be made to create equal opportunities such that they too can find their place as valuable contributors to the society. It is their right to live in a society which does not discriminate against them.
{{C_D}}
{{{short}}} {{#more}} {{{long}}} Read More {{/more}}
Views expressed above are the author’s own.
‘Humanity’s challenges can’t be solved by fighting … but by acting together’: The PM says India’s G20 presidency will reflect its tradition of seeking harmony between all
Order, order: NJAC better than collegium. But the current GoI-SC standoff must end. Both must offer something to the other
Arrest dysfunction: Bail should be the norm, not jail. Factors dissuading lower courts from giving bail must be addressed
Make a house call: EC does a great job holding polls. Let Parliament decide who should make appointments in EC
Boys can’t be boys: Young men’s response to changing gender roles is often violent because they are schooled into dominance
Colonialism by numbers: How arbitrary opinions from random ‘experts’ regularly & unfairly impact India’s global rankings
Free for all: Gujarat sees all parties make usual promises of freebies. But BJP has other messages too
Persian playing field: Iran is in a great churn. Neither more repression nor a China-Iran axis will help major democracies
Hair or there: Air India grooming guidelines cross the line
Winning the world, softly: This can be India’s moment globally. Build on the idea of Maha Akhand Bharat, decisively promoting India’s rich civilisational heritage and therefore its soft power
Interested in blogging for timesofindia.com? We will be happy to have you on board as a blogger, if you have the knack for writing. Just drop in a mail at toiblogs@timesinternet.in with a brief bio and we will get in touch with you.
Ruminations,TOI News,Tracking Indian Communities
Addictions
Heartchakra
Red Herring
Copyright © 2022 Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service

source

By admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *