@ConradJ " How has Diabetes UK offended anyone by the this advert?" Is the question I am struggling with. The ad lasted one minute and as mentioned above showed three cases.
To recap:
(1). Portly chap who had lost his leg;
(2). A svelte, trim young lady who was going blind;
(3). A chap who had died and we heard from his widow.
In only ONE out of the THREE cases above is being overweight specifically attributed as cause of T2. That is case (1) above. Case (2) does not seem overweight and we did not get to hear about why or how Case (3) contracted his T2.
I just don't get what is wrong with it. As mentioned above it is a one minute ad, not a documentary series.
Well
@Syd, it's offended me. Here's what I get from the one minute ad:
(1). Portly old man who gets diabetes and then loses his legbecause of T2 and his weight
(2). Middle-aged, BME mum, thinking she's not old enough to get diabetes (doesn't state which type,although voice over later emphasises T2)
(3). Old lady whose husband had diabetes and died before 'his time' because he didn't take care of himself.
In summary, diabetes affects fat, old people or younger BME's only, and because they got fat on their own accord and carry on with such self-destructive behaviour they (1) lose body parts, (3) die early or (2) go blind because their from the BME section of society.
Now, here's a thing for you:
(1). there are around 400,000 people in the UK with Type 1 diabetes - most of whom got it when they where under 15;
(2). 1 in 5 new diagnoses of Type 1's are in people over 40...
(3). there's more to diabetes mellitus than type 2, such as LADA. MODY, Wolfdram Syndrome and secondary diabetes.
(4). DUK calls itself 'the leading charity for people with diabetes', but where are their adverts for T1/1.5/...? I've seen posters on bus shelters, tube stations, GP surgeries, etc. etc., all talking up obesity and diabetes, but nothing about the symptoms for T1, etc.
They could have done it differently:
a) It could have been funkier, faster, hard vocals backed up with key points, such as 'diabetes is the leading cause of blindness in working age adults';
b) it could have included youngsters talking about being diagnosed and 6 or 5 or 14 or... and how they stab their fingers etc every day;
c) it could have included some famous faces:
Ad opens with Sir Steve Redgrave:
"Training for 5 Olympic gold medals was really hard work, but no where near as hard or difficult or life threatening as living with diabetes."
Dominic Littlewood walks into frame:
"You don't have to be old or fat to get diabetes - I've had it since I was 10, but...
Mel C pops up:
"if you do get diagnosed with diabetes take it seriously and take action to live a full and healthy life because it is possible."
Voice Over:
For info and support with living with diabetes, contact ...