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Diabetes Identity: A Mechanism of Social Change

Heather R. Walker, Michelle L. Litchman

2021Qualitative Health Research14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Historically, diabetes identity has been examined at the individual level as it relates to clinical outcomes and self-management practices. Yet, identity is not experienced as an individually isolated phenomenon. The purpose of this study is twofold: (a) examine the social meaning of diabetes identity and (b) formulate a theoretical model of diabetes identity through a sociopolitical lens. Adults living with diabetes engaged in a diabetes online community ( N = 20) participated in a 60-minute semi-structured interview focused on social diabetes experiences and diabetes identity. Seven themes emerged related to illness, individuation, and culture, resulting in a novel theoretical model of diabetes identity: willingness to identify, tales of the un-sick, legends of the responsible, a tradition of change-making, sense of sameness, mystification of difference, and diabetes as a unifying social category. Our study extends previous literature focused on self-management practices and compliance, resulting in a theoretical model of diabetes identity centered around social change.

Topics & Concepts

Identity (music)Diabetes mellitusSocial identity approachMeaning (existential)PsychologyMechanism (biology)Social identity theorySocial psychologyDevelopmental psychologyGender studiesSociologySocial groupMedicinePsychotherapistEpistemologyAestheticsEndocrinologyPhilosophyObesity and Health PracticesDiabetes Management and EducationSocial Science and Policy Research
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