I really can see though why people are still confused. Outside of the corona advice, type 1 and type 2 are treated very differently and employer wise, one is classed as a disability and the other isn't. It's bad enough trying to explain diabetes to Employers in peace time and I have spent many hours discussing what type 1 is with them in order for them to risk assess me, 'Well you can get rid of it with diet can't you'? and so on. Now I fear it will be back to the drawing board following this. I think also that Employers CAN treat the types differently under the non virus protocols surrounding disabilities but would have to rationalise it and tailor it to the individual (no matter the type because diabetes really is not a one size fits all). x
I would urge you to contact the
www.gov.uk site and discuss the matter with them, then. All I am doing is showing members where they can access the current info, as it stands, on the government's own website.
Personally, I completely agree with you that different types of diabetes are very different conditions, and each individual requires individual 'handling'. I find it particularly frustrating when a fit healthy diabetic of any type starts to instruct older, less fit diabetics with multiple co-morbities, about how they should go to work and/or not isolate, and not worry.
However, in a time of national crisis, it is unreasonable to expect distinctions between individuals at the level of the gov.uk website - especially when the government is adapting its instructions on a daily basis, on an ever-shifting playing field.
Last night multiple updates appeared on the
www.gov.uk website throughout the night.
That means that teams of civil servants were working through, editing, changing and updating, proof reading and trying to cover all their bases in order to present a coherent message.
That is extremely difficult.
To do it consistently, over a 10 day period, factoring in the ever-changing situation is positively heroic.
I can't imagine how little sleep they are getting.
So no, I don't currently expect them to have the capacity to distinguish between any of the 8 or so different types of diabetes, and then complicate a clear message by confusing employers with different instructions for each type.