Living with and managing type 1 diabetes in humanitarian settings: A qualitative synthesis of lived experience and stakeholder tacit knowledge
Oria James, Linda Abbou-Abbas, Lavanya Vijayasingham, Steve Zimmerman, Julia Robinson

TL;DR
This paper explores the challenges of managing type 1 diabetes in humanitarian crises and highlights the need for targeted interventions and education.
Contribution
The study provides a qualitative synthesis of lived experiences and stakeholder knowledge on type 1 diabetes in humanitarian settings.
Findings
Insulin and food insecurity create harsh trade-offs for people with type 1 diabetes and their families.
Low diabetes education in communities and health systems negatively impacts diabetes management.
Family and community-based solutions, alongside systemic reforms, are needed for better diabetes care in crises.
Abstract
Humanitarian health actors are beginning to better consider and manage non-communicable diseases, such as diabetes, in emergency and protracted crisis settings. However, a focus on the more globally prevalent type 2 diabetes (T2D) dominates. Blind spots prevail in the unmet needs for type 1 diabetes (T1D), a chronic autoimmune condition where individuals are unable to produce insulin, thereby dependent on lifelong insulin therapy and blood glucose management. Although some T1D management requirements overlap with those of T2D, the immediate risk of fatal complications following insulin therapy disruption, the earlier age of onset during childhood, adolescence or young adulthood, and its lower prevalence compared to T2D within communities and local health systems mean that T1D requires nuanced consideration and targeted interventions. Intending to inform program and policy design for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Research · Diabetes and associated disorders · Hyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients
