“Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: A Qualitative Study of Identity Development among Young People Living at a Residential Care Facility for People with Diabetes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theory and Methods
2.1. Theory
2.2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. “I’ve Changed So So Much—In a Positive Way”: The Young People Report a High Level of Personal Growth and Maturity after Moving to the Care Home
“Well, I’m not that little insecure girl anymore. Now I dare to show myself to other people and to stand up against other people and say: ‘Hey, I don’t want to do this.’ I couldn’t do that before. I’m no longer together with all the people who dragged me down and turned me into the person who couldn’t do anything… I think that’s made all the difference”(current resident #4, female).
”I’ve learned so much. Of course about diabetes but also about myself. I’ve found out that that if I really want it I can do it. I’m just so goddamn lazy… When I lived at home, I just never did anything. I just sat there in my room all day long—and now I’ve found out that there is so much more out there… So I’m out more and I’m more open and I’ve just accepted more responsibility as well… It’s changed me”(ex-resident #1, female).
”I’ve matured a lot. I deal with stuff in a totally different way than I used to back home. I think I used to take a lot of things for granted… I’m taking responsibility now. When I do something wrong, I own up to it and face the consequences—and I just wouldn’t have done that two years ago.”(current resident #5, female).
“…and before I came here, I wasn’t that good at talking to adults or asking for help. I just never did that… I just did everything myself because I wanted to do everything myself… But now I’ve started to ask for help if I need help—and that’s one of the things that has changed with me since I lived at home”(current resident #2, female).
“There’s actually one of the others who always calls me, when there is anything with his blood glucose or something concerning foods or insulin. And then I tell him ‘Ok, if you’ve done this or that then you’ll have to do this now.; I remember my parents laughing about them calling me instead of calling the social workers… And the people at (care home) thought it was funny too.”(ex-resident #4, male).
“After (care home) I did feel that ‘OK, I’m more grown up now,’ and to be honest, it’s (care home) that has made me who I am today—and I have thanked them for that… And as my boyfriend puts it: ‘If it hadn’t been for them, you wouldn’t be alive today”(ex-resident #3, female).
3.2. “It Has Really Helped a Lot That It’s That Big Thing We Have in Common”: The Importance of Identifying with Others and How Forming Relations Plays a Significant Role in the Young People’s Personal Development
“and sometimes you just need people around you who understand you—and people understand you here, ‘cause they’re in the exact same situation as you are. It’s really helped a lot that it’s that big thing we have in common”(current resident #2, female).
“When I’m here, I’m totally fine with it. Because I mean, we all have diabetes. It’s a completely different situation… And that’s really the reason I’m so happy to have come here. Because you’re not alone with the things. People understand you here”(current resident #3, female).
“Before I came here it was very difficult for me to inject insulin when I was with friends… But after coming here and seeing everyone else doing it, I’ve started to be more OK with it”(current resident #7, male).
“They were all what I would call perfect diabetics. They all had pretty numbers and were all like ‘I don’t eat this and don’t eat carbs ‘cause that’s not good for you.’ And then I’d just sit there with my blood glucose way too high… I couldn’t really relate to them properly…. Here it’s more like everyone has kind of a hard time with it and everyone has to learn to accept it. So, you feel you can relate to them better”(ex-resident #1, female).
”…you could just go and talk to someone about it: ’my diabetes just sucks, let me tell you about it’ and then they’d go: ‘well that same thing happened to me, you just need to do this and that.’ It was really nice to be able to talk about your diabetes with other people who also have it”(ex-resident #3, female).
3.3. “Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: The Young People Have a Constant Fear of Being Different
”People from my school don’t even know I have diabetes. It’s not something I just tell people… I mean if they notice that I have the pump in my pocket and they ask me, of course I’ll tell them… But otherwise it’s not something I tell them”(current resident #2, female).
”Sometimes I just don’t want to take my insulin in front of friends in school. Everybody doesn’t need to know that I live in a care home and that I have diabetes”(current resident #5, female).
“Well, it (diabetes) takes up a lot of space all the time, but much less when I’m here at home where we have more freedom, I guess… Even though they remind me to check my blood glucose every second or third hour. But I actually like that”(current resident #1, male).
“I feel that diabetes is normally a very lonely disease. I know lots of people have it, but you’re rarely together with anyone who has it—only when you’re here. I mean, I don’t go to school with anyone who has it and they just don’t understand what it’s like and they always ask stuff like ‘doesn’t it hurt, when you prick yourself’ and I just can’t do it. I don’t want to talk about it all the time…”(current resident #2, female).
“Everybody is just so prejudiced about people living in care homes. They think it’s only people wearing bad clothes, who don’t have parents, who smoke weed and do drugs… Sometimes when I do tell people that I live in a home, they look at me and see that I wear Adidas and have an iPhone and stuff… And they’ll ask ‘are you sure you live in a home.’ They don’t think that we can look just like regular people”(current resident #5, female).
“There was just someone to be with all the time. There was someone to talk to if you were happy or mad about something or if you were sad… It was basically just great to be with other people all the time. Especially because it was someone with the same disease as you. Because if you talk about it with someone who hasn’t got diabetes, then they just don’t understand it the same way”(ex-resident #5, female).
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Grabowski, D.; Jespersen, L.N.; Johansen, L.B. “Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: A Qualitative Study of Identity Development among Young People Living at a Residential Care Facility for People with Diabetes. Adolescents 2021, 1, 348-359. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents1030026
Grabowski D, Jespersen LN, Johansen LB. “Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: A Qualitative Study of Identity Development among Young People Living at a Residential Care Facility for People with Diabetes. Adolescents. 2021; 1(3):348-359. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents1030026
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrabowski, Dan, Louise Norman Jespersen, and Lise Bro Johansen. 2021. "“Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: A Qualitative Study of Identity Development among Young People Living at a Residential Care Facility for People with Diabetes" Adolescents 1, no. 3: 348-359. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents1030026
APA StyleGrabowski, D., Jespersen, L. N., & Johansen, L. B. (2021). “Diabetes Makes You Feel Lonely When You’re the Only One”: A Qualitative Study of Identity Development among Young People Living at a Residential Care Facility for People with Diabetes. Adolescents, 1(3), 348-359. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents1030026