I was thinking about this only a day or so ago
The tragedy isn't that cancer recieves more attention, sympathy, whatever than diabetes
The real tragedy is that good self management and a normal life with the latter condition, which to most people should be achievable, seems to meet with so many obstacles. From lack of structured education, lack of encouragement from some health care professionals, a one size fits all approach to treatment regimens, dietary advice, treatment goals,inadequate quantities of test strips prescribed, a hoplelessly unscientific approach to treating the condition ( advising a patient to eat plenty of pasta and then saying they can;t have cake), difficulties with ordering precriptions and fitting in reviews for people to work. And then negative impact of the press so that the general public think they have the right to hector people about their lifestyle when thay don't even understand the effects of carbohydrate or exertion or the dangers of hypoglycaemia. Add in the opposition some people have from colleagues, peers ( given a hard time for needing to test, inject or treat a hypo at school or work), and a heavy handed approach by the dvla ( I agree that driving should stop if a patent is having severe hypos but a years ban is ridiculous
If only people were just allowed to get on with it