Content area

Abstract

A comprehensive understanding of the social and psychological impact of diabetes mellitus is important for informing policy and practice. One potentially significant, yet under-researched, issue is the social stigma surrounding diabetes. This narrative review draws on literature about health-related stigma in diabetes and other chronic conditions in order to develop a framework for understanding diabetes-related stigma. Our review of the literature found that people who do not have diabetes assume that diabetes is not a stigmatized condition. In contrast, people with diabetes report that stigma is a significant concern to them, experienced across many life domains, e.g., in the workplace, in relationships. The experience of diabetes-related stigma has a significant negative impact on many aspects of psychological well-being and may also result in sub-optimal clinical outcomes for people with diabetes. We propose a framework that highlights the causes (attitudes of blame, feelings of fear and disgust, and the felt need to enforce social norms and avoid disease), experiences (being judged, rejected, and discriminated against), and consequences (e.g., distress, poorer psychological well-being, and sub-optimal selfcare) of diabetes-related stigma and also identifies potential mitigating strategies to reduce diabetes-related stigma and/or enhance coping and resilience amongst people with diabetes. The systematic investigation of the experiences, causes, and consequences of diabetes-related stigma is an urgent research priority. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Social Stigma in Diabetes: A Framework to Understand a Growing Problem for an Increasing Epidemic
Author
Schabert, Jasmin; Browne, Jessica L; Mosely, Kylie; Speight, Jane
Pages
1-10
Section
REVIEW ARTICLE
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Mar 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
11781653
e-ISSN
11781661
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1465503706
Copyright
Copyright Wolters Kluwer Health Adis International Mar 2013