Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
I recently read a blog by a Canadian blogger who has just done a run for JDRF. She was diagnosed in her 20s however, and expressed disappointment that adults with Type 1 often seem to be put in the background, as if it is only about children. Even the children who are now grown up seem a little forgotten, and I agree with the blogger that it's the inclusion of the word 'Juvenile' - I was 49 for goodness sake!
I know it's a very big thing to change a name for a big organisation like this, but surely it would help their cause if they were more clearly identified with Type 1 diabetes as a whole. I'm not talking about their websites or the work they do, just the public's perception, and even amongst adult Type 1s like myself. Nor is this a T1/T2 issue - no-one deserves diabetes of whatever type in my opinion - but the treatment and issues are often quite different and because we are a minority we often have to sift through the information directed at the majority to find what is relevant to us.
I don't know them, but I would love to see the statistics about how many people get diagnosed with Type 1 as adults in relation to how many in childhood. I believe there are about 300,000 Type 1s in the UK, including about 20,000 children, but not sure how many of the adults grew up with it.
It's possible, of course, that the 'Juvenile' element helps garner more sympathy for the cause, and possible more donations as a result. But, like the blogger, I've never really felt the 'affiliation' to JDRF that I really ought.
This is the blog entry, by the way:
http://canadiandgal.blogspot.com/2011/04/5k-run-for-jdrf.html
I know it's a very big thing to change a name for a big organisation like this, but surely it would help their cause if they were more clearly identified with Type 1 diabetes as a whole. I'm not talking about their websites or the work they do, just the public's perception, and even amongst adult Type 1s like myself. Nor is this a T1/T2 issue - no-one deserves diabetes of whatever type in my opinion - but the treatment and issues are often quite different and because we are a minority we often have to sift through the information directed at the majority to find what is relevant to us.
I don't know them, but I would love to see the statistics about how many people get diagnosed with Type 1 as adults in relation to how many in childhood. I believe there are about 300,000 Type 1s in the UK, including about 20,000 children, but not sure how many of the adults grew up with it.
It's possible, of course, that the 'Juvenile' element helps garner more sympathy for the cause, and possible more donations as a result. But, like the blogger, I've never really felt the 'affiliation' to JDRF that I really ought.
This is the blog entry, by the way:
http://canadiandgal.blogspot.com/2011/04/5k-run-for-jdrf.html