Lee

Lee has had asthma all her life. She has type II diabetes with a family history. Weight is seen as a major factor in both conditions. She controls diabetes well with diet and exercise.

Lee has had asthma all her life and describes it as something that I live with. However, when she has a cold, asthma becomes the main priority, because: So diabetes ‚ if it’s going to kill me, it’ll do it slowly. Asthma, if it’s going to do it, it’ll do it fast. For a long time she was very, very fat. Following the diabetes diagnosis she lost weight and now controls the condition well with diet and exercise.

She recently moved to a new area and misses being with a previous GP where patients could be referred for gym sessions or weight watchers, with the first 12 weeks funded by the NHS. Because Lee doesn’t like gyms she makes a point of walking everywhere and is planning to cycle to a new job. She was pleased to get a blood glucose monitor on prescription when requested from her new GP to enable self-management in real time rather than depending on six-monthly readings, although she has to pay for the test strips herself.

Lee suggests the education and advice about type 2 diabetes has been pretty poor throughout. She did receive some advice from a dietician in a mixed group of patients, but felt that it was pitched at too low a level to be of use to her personally. She found more useful advice by going on Internet forums and subsequently feels more confident consulting with her doctor. She has previously worked in the public health sector and feels well equipped to interpret medical information. She doesn’t push her GP for information, however, because she is concerned that it might contradict what she has found to work best for herself. She contrasts her new relationship with her GP as compared to the situation in the past:
I think being poorly for quite a chunk of my childhood and adolescence, basically, I had been much more accustomed to just thinking, Doctor knows best’ and letting them do the telling. Whereas now with that knowledge behind me, I’m more comfortable going, in fact, understanding that general practitioner’ does mean a general and not necessarily expert in any one particular field of medicine. So as I said, these conditions belong to me. I know how treatment and interventions affect me, so therefore I can tell them and have a discussion about things rather than just saying, Oh yes, doctor. Of course you know best’, which is an approach that I always had when I was a lot younger and [was] a lot more na‚Äö√†√∂‚àö√≤ve.

Lee describes herself as a happy patient at this moment in time. When asked how her health care could be improved, she replies, If it isn’t broke, don’t fix it.

Age at interview 49

Gender Female

Lee has had asthma all her life. Her diabetes may have a genetic explanation, although she believes it could have been brought on early due to obesity.

Age at interview 49

Gender Female

Lee attended an appointment with a new GP who reviewed her medicines and reduced the dose of one drug. She links the recent reduction in her medication list to losing weight and exercising.

Age at interview 49

Gender Female

Lee attended a diet course for diabetics but those attending were diverse and she didn’t get what she wanted from it.

Age at interview 49

Gender Female