Members of the lbian, gay, bisexual, and transgenr (LGBT) muny have unique health dispari and worse health out than their heterosexual unter
Contents:
COMG OUT TWICE: BEG A GAY DIABETIC
As a type 1 diabetic sce the age of 16, this enunter was the first time my chronic illns impacted my sex life as a gay man. My body went om attackg self om the si, to sabotagg my relatnships as I was g out. This is the story of g out twice: beg a gay diabetic. * gay diabetes *
Thera Garnero, CDCES, a certified diabet re and tn specialist, an assistant clil profsor, and the director of diabet certifite programs at the Universy of the Pacific Sacramento, California, raised this alarm July 2010 the Amerin Diabet Associatn journal Diabet Spectm, revealg that, although there are more lbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) people wh diabet than there are total people wh type 1 diabet, LGBTQ+ data is unrreported or blocked. It’s a place where patients n feel “blamed and shamed” for body size or diabet stat on top of systemic issu like homo- and transphobia, racism, and ableism.
GAY MEN AND TYPE 2 DIABET
Fd provirs the Gay & Lbian Medil Associatn’s database or the World Profsnal Associatn for Transgenr Health (WPATH) directory. Methods: Data om the 2014 Behavral Risk Factor Surveillance System for 3776 lbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) adults and 142, 852 heterosexual adults aged 18 years and olr were ed to timate the prevalence of diabet.
Gay men ls often and lbian and bisexual women more often reported a body mass x of 30 kg/m2 or higher than heterosexuals. 4% of gay men, and 10.