Diagnosis and treatment
Identify Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, treatment history, medication changes, insulin use, monitoring requirements and specialist review pattern.
Potentially, yes. Diabetes can support a TPD claim when the evidence shows that, because of complications, treatment burden, safety risk, fatigue, or glucose instability, you are unlikely to sustain suitable paid work under the wording of your superannuation insurance policy. The claim is usually not decided by the diagnosis label alone.
For most diabetes-related TPD claims, the practical question is whether you can work reliably over ordinary weeks: attend consistently, concentrate safely, meet pace and productivity requirements, travel or perform duties without unacceptable risk, and keep doing that work despite reasonable treatment and adjustments. A person may still complete short tasks or have better days, but still be unable to maintain dependable employment.
If you are preparing a claim, start with your exact policy definition, the date your insurer or trustee will assess, and a clear evidence trail linking diabetes-related limitations to real job demands. Useful next reading includes evidence required for a TPD claim, any occupation versus own occupation definitions, and how the TPD claim process works.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Evidence lens
Use this strip as a quick check while reading: a strong TPD claim usually connects the policy wording, medical evidence, work history and timing into one consistent position.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Diabetes complications and reliability map
A diabetes-related TPD claim is usually strongest when the evidence does more than name Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes. The file should explain treatment demands, glucose instability, complication burden, safety risk, fatigue, attendance limits and whether capacity can be repeated in a real job under the policy wording.
Identify Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, treatment history, medication changes, insulin use, monitoring requirements and specialist review pattern.
Explain hypoglycaemia, hyperglycaemia, unpredictable episodes, recovery time and how often symptoms interrupt ordinary tasks.
Connect neuropathy, retinopathy, kidney disease, cardiovascular issues, wounds, pain or fatigue to practical functional restrictions.
Address driving, machinery, shift work, height, heat, concentration, medication timing and other job demands that may become unsafe.
Show whether work can be maintained across ordinary weeks, not only on a good day or during a short supervised attempt.
Accuracy guard: diabetes does not automatically mean TPD. The safer claim story is complication-aware, treatment-specific and focused on reliable work capacity under the policy wording.
Use this table to check whether the claim material answers the policy wording, medical evidence and real work function in the same file.
| Evidence area | What it should show | Common weakness |
|---|---|---|
| Policy definition | The evidence should answer the exact any-occupation or own-occupation wording and the assessment date in the policy. | Using general incapacity language without tying it to the policy test. |
| Medical evidence | Reports should explain diabetes and the practical significance of glucose stability, complication burden, treatment participation and sustainable work capacity. | Listing a diagnosis without explaining why work is not sustainable. |
| Work function | The file should describe attendance, pace, concentration, safety, recovery time and realistic job demands. | Assuming a bad day or a symptom label is enough without showing ordinary-week reliability. |
| Chronology | Treatment, work attempts, setbacks and insurer or trustee dates should line up clearly. | Leaving gaps that let decision-makers treat the problem as temporary or unsupported. |
This page is for people with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes who are considering TPD and are dealing with one or more of the following:
Most assessments are built around three linked layers: clinical status, function, and vocational reality.
Strong claim files connect those layers clearly. Weak files often provide extensive pathology and medication records but never convert that material into a practical answer to the policy definition.
Many claimants assume the diagnosis itself will carry the claim. In practice, insurers and trustees usually test whether your limitations are durable and work-relevant. For diabetes, that may include:
The question is usually not “Can you do anything?” It is “Can you do suitable paid work reliably, repeatedly, and safely in real employment conditions?”
Under an any occupation style definition, the insurer may argue you could move into lighter or administrative work. A robust response usually explains why that theoretical option is not sustainable in your specific circumstances when attendance reliability, glucose instability, fatigue, visual limits, or neuropathic symptoms are properly considered.
Under an own occupation definition, the analysis can be narrower, but practical proof still matters. If your pre-disability role required shift work, driving, manual handling, field work, emergency response, or strict pace targets, evidence should map your current limitations to those real duties rather than generic job titles.
Because wording differs between policies, strategy should be built around your exact definition and relevant date requirements, not broad internet generalisations.
A strong diabetes TPD file usually gives the insurer or trustee a simple, evidence-backed path from medical condition to work incapacity. The most useful records are not merely thicker records. They are records that answer the policy test in practical work terms.
Objective tests and pathology matter, but they are most persuasive when connected to a coherent functional narrative. If a report says diabetes is medically managed, explain whether management still leaves unpredictable work interruption, safety risk, or unsustainable recovery cycles.
The safest first step is not to send every record at once. Use the first month to organise the claim around the policy definition and the work-capacity question.
This preparation does not guarantee an outcome. It reduces avoidable confusion and makes it easier for a reviewer to understand the real work problem.
Diabetes-related incapacity can arise from multiple overlapping issues rather than one dramatic event. Decision-makers often need a clear explanation of cumulative burden. For example, moderate neuropathy plus recurrent glycaemic instability plus chronic fatigue can produce major reliability problems even where each issue, viewed alone, appears “manageable.”
Likewise, treatment burden can affect employability through frequent review schedules, medication adjustments, recovery windows, and unavoidable variation in daily function. Accurate chronology and practical detail can materially improve how this is understood.
Diabetes records can be misunderstood if they only show diagnosis, blood results, medication, or attendance at routine reviews. For TPD purposes, it is usually more useful to explain what those records mean for dependable work over ordinary weeks. A treating doctor or endocrinologist can often help by linking HbA1c history, hypoglycaemia episodes, neuropathy signs, eye-review findings, kidney or cardiovascular complications, medication changes, and appointment burden to practical restrictions.
Where external medical material is used, keep it source-aware and conservative. General diabetes education from bodies such as Diabetes Australia or the National Diabetes Services Scheme can help a claimant understand terminology, but it does not replace case-specific medical opinion. The insurer or trustee still needs evidence about your own functional limits, work history, treatment response, and the precise policy definition that applies to your superannuation cover.
A useful way to brief your clinician is to ask them to separate three issues: what diabetes-related complications are present, what restrictions or safety risks those complications create, and why those restrictions are likely to affect sustainable paid work rather than only isolated tasks. That distinction makes the page's answer-ready point clearer: diabetes may support TPD when the evidence proves durable work incapacity, not merely because diabetes is diagnosed.
A claimant with longstanding diabetes can complete short administrative tasks at home. However, records show recurrent glycaemic instability, neuropathic pain, and fatigue with unpredictable bad days. A structured return-to-work attempt failed due to inconsistent attendance, safety concerns during travel, and inability to maintain pace benchmarks.
In this type of file, the core issue is not isolated task capability. The core issue is whether suitable paid work can be performed reliably and safely over ordinary weeks. If evidence is structured well, that distinction becomes clear.
A delay or refusal is not always the end of the process. Start by identifying the exact basis for the decision: definition mismatch, insufficient functional analysis, chronology conflict, or vocational disagreement. Then respond with targeted evidence that addresses that specific concern.
Large bundles of repetitive records rarely outperform a disciplined file with one coherent chronology, role-demand mapping, and clinician reports that directly answer the policy test.
Preparation quality often determines assessment speed. In diabetes matters, a practical starter pack usually includes: your policy wording; a one-page chronology of treatment and work changes; recent specialist and GP letters that describe concrete restrictions; a role-duty list from your last stable job; and records showing failed or reduced work attempts. Keeping this pack updated helps you answer follow-up requests consistently and reduces avoidable rework.
It is also useful to keep a short symptom-and-function log over several weeks. Notes on fatigue cycles, glucose instability impacts, concentration changes, and recovery time can help clinicians provide clearer, evidence-linked opinions that align with vocational reality.
One of the most common insurer positions is that a claimant could move into lower-demand administrative work. The response should not be broad disagreement. It should be evidence-led and role-specific. Start by defining what that proposed work actually requires in practice: fixed attendance windows, screen concentration blocks, travel requirements, meeting reliability, and pace expectations across ordinary weeks. Then map your diabetes-related limitations directly to those tasks.
For example, if glycaemic instability creates unpredictable recovery periods, explain how that affects punctuality and continuity, not just symptom comfort. If neuropathy or visual fluctuation interrupts computer-based output, show the effect on quality and speed targets, not just diagnosis labels. If medication adjustment cycles cause functional variation, document frequency and duration so decision-makers can assess real-world sustainability rather than theoretical capacity.
This type of response is usually strongest when medical evidence, claimant statements, and work-attempt records all tell the same story in plain language: what was tried, what support was provided, what failed, and why the failure is likely to persist despite reasonable adjustments. A disciplined file does not overstate incapacity. It demonstrates practical limits with enough detail that a neutral reviewer can follow the logic from clinical evidence to vocational outcome.
Before lodging, check whether your medical evidence answers the exact work-capacity question in your super policy. Useful questions for your treating team include whether glucose instability, neuropathy, vision changes, fatigue, medication effects, or appointment burden would predictably interrupt ordinary work attendance, pace, safety, and concentration over the long term.
It is also worth checking what date the policy uses for assessment, whether the definition is any occupation or own occupation, and whether earlier income protection, workers compensation, CTP, Centrelink, or employer records describe your capacity differently. If there is a difference, explain it carefully rather than leaving the insurer or trustee to infer inconsistency.
Diabetes TPD files often become harder when every document is true in isolation but the overall file looks uneven. A GP note might say symptoms are stable, an endocrinologist letter might focus on blood results, and an employer record might only mention absences. A stronger file ties those records together so the reviewer can see why clinical management does not necessarily equal sustainable work capacity.
When preparing the claim, compare the medical reports against your job demands, failed work attempts, daily-function statement, and any insurer forms. Look for gaps about safety-sensitive duties, driving, screen concentration, foot pain or balance risk, vision fluctuation, recovery time after episodes, and the practical effect of appointments or treatment changes. Closing those gaps early is often more useful than adding another generic diagnosis letter.
No. A diagnosis alone is usually not enough. You generally need evidence showing long-term inability to perform suitable work under your policy definition.
Potentially yes. The practical test is usually reliable, sustainable work capacity over time, not performance on isolated good days.
Your evidence should explain why proposed alternatives remain unsustainable in your circumstances, including attendance reliability, concentration variability, fatigue, visual limits, and safety issues.
That depends on the case, but many files are stronger when GP and specialist evidence are aligned and expressed in practical work-capacity terms.
The important complications are the ones that affect reliable work capacity. These may include recurrent hypoglycaemia, neuropathy, retinopathy, kidney or cardiovascular complications, treatment side effects, fatigue, and safety-sensitive restrictions.
Yes, if they are accurate and documented. Dates, modified duties, absences, safety issues, and reasons the attempt could not be sustained can help show the difference between short task ability and reliable employment capacity.
Important: This page is general information only and not legal advice. Outcomes depend on policy wording, evidence quality, and individual circumstances.