How Can I Help My Child?
Once you learn to recognize your child's feelings, here are some tips for coping
with those emotions:
Acknowledge your child's feelings. Check
in with your child regularly. Try to listen to everything he or she has to say
before bringing up your own feelings. This kind of communication doesn't always have
to be verbal. Drawing, writing, or playing music can help kids with diabetes express
their emotions.
Encourage active health care management. It's important to reinforce
the idea that when kids take good care of themselves and manage their diabetes, they
can avoid undesirable things like extra shots or missing out on activities that their
friends enjoy. Your child might even want to ask the doctor questions on his or her
own.
Build independence. It can be hard, especially at first, but it's
important to resist the urge to lower your expectations or overprotect a child with
diabetes. Instead, encourage the same independence that you'd expect from your other
kids. With the encouragement and support of their parents, kids with diabetes can
take on some responsibilities for managing it — a change that often has a positive,
confidence-building effect.
Help kids find their strengths. Is your child a reader, a hockey
player, a singer, a future astronomer, an art lover? Diabetes does not define someone's
life — it's only a very small part of who your child is.
Focus on friendships. Having fun with friends builds confidence
and a sense of belonging. Encourage your child to discuss diabetes with friends. This
can help friends feel more comfortable interacting with your child in the same way
they did before the diagnosis. Instead of focusing on the one thing that's different,
kids can focus on all the things that they have in common with their friends.
Find ways to cope with bullying. Sometimes kids pick on peers
with diabetes or other health problems. Your child might use the following ways to
deal with teasing or bullying:
- Act brave, walk away, and ignore the bully. Tell your child to look the
bully in the eye and say something like, "I want you to stop right now." Counsel your
child to then walk away and ignore any further taunts. Encourage your child to "walk
tall," head held high (this type of body language sends a message that your child
isn't vulnerable).
- Use humor or give the bully a compliment to throw the bully off guard.
However, tell your child not to use humor to make fun of the bully.
- Use the buddy system. Enlisting the help of friends or a group may help
both your child and others stand up to bullies.
- Tell an adult. If your child is being bullied, emphasize that it's very
important to tell an adult. Teachers, principals, parents, and lunchroom personnel
at school can all help to stop it.
Correct misconceptions. Talk to your child about the fact that
people do nothing to deserve diabetes — it just happens. Also, if your child
feels like the diabetes is causing problems for you or your family, offer reassurance
that there's no reason to feel guilty. Instead, your child should focus on dealing
with his or her own feelings about diabetes, not yours.
Tell friends, teachers, and others about your child's diabetes.
Ask your child if he or she wants others to know about the diabetes. Kids sometimes
find it less embarrassing if friends and classmates know that they have diabetes —
that way, they don't have to worry about what their friends will think when they head
to the nurse's office every day. Teachers and care providers also should know about
the condition and its management (for instance, if your child takes breaks to test
blood sugar or eats snacks at certain times).
Connect with others dealing with diabetes. Finding a support group
for kids and families with diabetes can help kids to feel less different. These groups
can boost your confidence as you deal with diabetes and offer advice and tips on managing
it. The diabetes health care team might be able to help you connect with support groups
in your area.
Get help when you need it. Be sure to keep your child's diabetes
health care team in the loop about any emotional issues — they deal with
this all the time and can provide help for your child and advice for you. If your
child shows any signs of depression (such as lasting sadness or irritability, tiredness,
appetite changes, or changes in sleeping habits), talk to your child's doctor or a
mental health professional.
Every parent of a child with diabetes must deal with the feelings that come with
the disease. Try to keep in mind that for most kids, negative feelings about diabetes
pass or change with time as they adjust to living with it.
Date reviewed: February 2018