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Should Dolls Have Diseases?

8/1/2025

14 Comments

 
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by David Hagenbuch - professor of marketing at Messiah University -
​author of 
Honorable Influence - founder of Mindful Marketing -
author of Mindful Marketing: Business Ethics that Stick 

Perhaps no toy is more iconic than Mattel’s Barbie. From its humble beginnings 66 years ago at the American Toy Fair to a 2023 blockbuster movie, an ever-expanding variety of dolls and accessories have delighted millions of children, as well as some adults wanting to relive their childhoods. Throughout their existence, Barbie products have been consistently on brand – cheery and upbeat. So why would the renowned toymaker want to give its signature product a life-altering disease?               
 
Over the years, Barbie has held well over 100 different jobs that have literally ranged from A to Z, e.g.,  astronaut (1965) to zoologist (2021). In between, Barbie also been an Olympic skier (1975), a rock star (1986), a business executive (1992), a film producer (2005), and a martial artist (2017), to name a few other occupations.

However, there’s a big difference between a profession that people choose and a disease that chooses them. Moreover, individuals often undertake years of schooling or other specialized training to prepare for their career, which then becomes a major source of self-esteem, as well as a primary personal identifier when introducing themselves to others. No one says, “Hi, I’m Chris, I’m incontinent.”
 
It's true that there are many people who rightly take pride in being cancer survivors or in recovering from other major health challenges, like heart attacks. However, I’ve also heard some say that they don’t want a disease to be what defines them. They want to be recognized and remembered for other things.
 
By marketing a Barbie with type 1 diabetes, is Mattel teaching kids to make the disease what defines them?
 
To the company’s credit, over many years it has gained considerable experience making dolls with unique physical attributes and related challenges. As might be expected, some of the toys have been better received than others.
 
Mattel first introduced a Barbie with a disability in 1997: Share-A-Smile Becky, who came with a pink wheelchair. However, the initial success that saw 6,000 dolls sold within the first two weeks was short-lived, as users found that Becky’s wheelchair was largely incompatible with the Barbie Dreamhouse.

In 2000, Mattel marketed a Barbie with vitiligo, a skin condition in which a lack of pigmentation gives a person an uneven, spotty complexion, and another doll with no hair, designed to represent any of the many reasons a child may experience hair loss.
 
In 2012, The company made Ella, a bald friend of Barbie, distributing a limited number of the dolls directly to hospitals. Two years later, the toymaker produced more Ellas in response to a petition from the mother of a cancer patient.

Mattel released Barbies with different body types in 2016, e.g., tall, curvy, and petite – a significant departure from the doll’s perpetually svelte physique. Unlike other Barbies with unique physical attributes, these dolls’ distinct traits weren’t directly related to diseases or disabilities. Instead, they indirectly supported positive mental health by diverging from society’s homogenized and often unrealistic standards of beauty.

In 2022, Mattel introduced an expanded line of dolls with disabilities, this time consulting experts to ensure even more accurate representation of the conditions. The collection included a Barbie with a prosthetic leg, another with a behind-the-ear-hearing aid, and a Ken doll with vitiligo. AmeriDisability, which seeks to represent America’s disability community, lauded the introduction as “groundbreaking.”
 
Similarly, in 2023, ahead of the release of its first Barbie with Down syndrome, Mattel worked with the National Down Syndrome Society to ensures the doll’s accurate representation of the genetic condition.
 
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So, in many ways a Barbie with type 1 diabetes is just another iteration of differently enabled dolls for Mattel, but what do these dolls mean for our society? Is their net impact positive or negative?
 
Given that neither dolls nor diseases are in my wheelhouse, I reached out to several people who could answer these questions more authoritatively: Dr. Kevin Barnes – a retired pediatrician, Dr. Sarah Jones – a nurse educator, and Meredith Schorner – an RN and school nurse.
 
Barnes said he appreciates that Mattel spent more than a year working with a diabetes organization in order to ensure the doll’s accuracy, and he believes that for some of the more than 200,000 children in the U.S. with type 1 diabetes mellitus, it could be therapeutic to play with a doll that experiences the same things they do.
 
However, he also expresses some valid concerns, for instance:
  • Where do we draw the line on dolls representing childhood diseases, particularly ones that are somewhat “invisible” to others even though they greatly impact daily life, e.g., celiac disease, asthma?
  • Given Barbie’s history of more often emphasizing style over substance, how much of Mattel’s motivation in making the doll is the positive publicity it generates?
 
Jones believes that the type 1 diabetes Barbie can potentially do much good by helping to make the condition more mainstream, or acceptable, which among other things, could encourage proper self-management. That care is critical given that the disease demands intensive insulin therapy with either multiple daily injections or an insulin pump.
 
With confirmation from a colleague who regularly cares for diabetes patients, Jones states that Barbie’s self-monitoring insulin pump is the standard for treatment, which Jones sees as positive overall. However, like Barnes, she also raises some important questions about the doll:
  • Does its female Caucasian identity fall short in representing the disease’s well-documented impact across gender and racial lines?
  • Could Barbie’s continuous glucose monitoring device and insulin pump create stigma for children whose insurance will not cover the advanced technology and for families that cannot afford it so they must rely on traditional injections?
  • Could the doll make it more socially acceptable to have type 1 diabetes but not type 2? This may be an increasing concern given that incidences of type 2 diabetes, which is often associated with obesity, are on the rise among children.
 
Not surprising, Jone’s differentiation of the two sometimes conflated conditions coincides with that of the University of Virginia Health System, which states that “Unlike type 1, type 2 diabetes is not an autoimmune disorder,” rather it “occurs mostly in people over 45, or in younger people with obesity or genetic reasons.”
 
Besides her role as a school nurse, Schorner is a parent of young girls who believes the diabetic Barbie will be “an exciting new toy for many.” More than just a plaything for those who have type 1 diabetes, she expects the doll will raise questions for nondiabetic children and help them better understand the devices they see on some of their peers. She elaborates:
 
“Children need to know that their peers with type 1 diabetes (T1D) didn't do anything ‘wrong’ to become diabetic – they didn't eat too much sugar, and it certainly doesn't have anything to do with their weight. T1D is increasing in prevalence, and diabetic children need lots of support at home and at school. They need peers that can be not just understanding but also helpful to them in managing their diabetes.”
 
“Under the guidance of a knowledgeable adult, engaging in play with this doll may help young children develop a basic understanding of CGM readings, carbohydrate counting, and insulin requirements. It could also help children to know what to do if they encounter a person experiencing a diabetic emergency.”
 
Schorner has firsthand experience caring for children with type 1 diabetes. In one case, the child’s family chose finger sticks and insulin injections, at least in part because they were concerned that a more socially visible glucose monitor might label their child as a diabetic.
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Another case involving a child who uses a glucose monitor and pump was different. Schorner recently had the privilege of telling this child about the new Barbie. When she did, the child’s face “lit up with excitement,” and they immediately asked to see a picture of the doll on Schorner’s phone. The child compared their technology to the doll's and although they weren’t the same, they appreciated seeing the doll with its accessories and seemed eager to add the Barbie to their nearly nonexistent collection of diabetes-related toys.
 
Notwithstanding this very positive response, Schorner added that not all states or insurance companies offer the same assistance to help cover the out-of-pocket cost of insulin pumps. Consequently, she can imagine how the Barbie could be discouraging to families of diabetic children that don’t have the means to purchase newer insulin-dispensing devices.
 
Over a decade of writing Mindful Marketing articles, I’ve often relied on experts to help me know the relevant facts and understand the nuances of complex ethical issues. The question of whether Mattel should market a Barbie with type 1 diabetes was certainly one for which I’ve needed such assistance.
 
The three experts on which I leaned for this piece have been extremely helpful to me in elucidating the case’s multifaceted, competing considerations. Despite the very real reservations that Barnes, Jones, and Schorner all offered, it seems that each believes there’s a place for a diabetic Barbie.
 
Their informed input certainly has shaped my opinion, but what may have been most impactful is the heartfelt reaction of a diabetic child who loves that a special Barbie will reflect their unique life experience.
 
No toy is perfect, but one that receives significant support from healthcare experts and that instantly delights a child with a life-altering disease most likely represents Mindful Marketing.
​
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14 Comments
Clay Holmes
8/1/2025 11:41:51 am

In my opinion, this is a great example of when "inclusivity" is used as a shroud to protect hidden motives. To/for what, I'm not certain or making any assertions hereabout. Yet what is evident here to me is that it's not something that many people would have asked for.

As mentioned in the article, disease is not something that it's sufferers tend to wear proudly, like a badge, to the point where it becomes an identity. Barbie dolls have an especially key role here in this thought exercise, as their mission/purpose is centered around the formation of a child's identity. On the other hand, the extent to which this is true is likely also overblown from an adults persopective; that is to say, do kids think about it this deeply? Perhaps, or perhaps not, but even if they can grasp the message, they would not be able to understand the full implications a product decision like this has on their development.

Nowadays, it seems more like adults, parents or not, are makling these product choices for the kids themselves. I.e. if little Sally (5 y/o, Leukemia) asked for a barbie that looks more like her, her nurse could simply have taken off the hair piece, eliminating the need for loud new packaging with branding all over, advertising her aliments as Barbie's key identity factor, because that's not what Sally asked for.

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Danielle Kerr
9/2/2025 12:07:11 pm

This article embodies so much of what marketing struggles with in this day and age. It has become so common for brands to hop on a band wagon and participate in representing marginalized groups. The problem with this lies in how the brand goes about it. Many times, companies choose to prioritize being the first to create that representation and take credit for trying, rather than making a true effort to do good by these communities by putting real thought and consideration into these projects. Target Corporation gets in a controversy with the LGBTQ+ community every summer when they release their Pride collections. The reason for this is because they do not participate in any real advocacy for the community outside of releasing these collections in June. Many deem Target’s efforts to be “lazy”, a “cash grab”, and “performative”.

So in turn, when a company like Mattel attempts to truly make a difference and broaden their representation, people become apprehensive about the attempt because they are remembering examples from other brands where this type of project ended very poorly. In addition, of course there is something to be considered with the fact that Barbie has had a notorious history with being exclusive up until recent decades which makes changing the consumer’s perception even harder.

It is clear that Mattel has made great effort to leave a genuine and positive impact on children with disabilities and it has been widely received well by the children themselves and that is what matters most. They have partnered long-term for each doll with an organization that specializes in that disability to ensure the most accurate and positive representation.

However, I think Dr. Sarah Johns raised some important questions regarding the socio-economic specificities and racial implications with the diabetic doll that absolutely do need to be taken into consideration. Perhaps enlisting some focus groups with adults who grew up with diabetes in different socio-economic classes and lacked representation in the toy area would provide valuable insight for this next generation on how Mattel can move forward. Children do not see the world the way adults do, I think to figure out how to address this matter the best thing Mattel can do is to consider the opinion of the child themselves as closely as they can.

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DeAngelo Tyson
9/4/2025 05:48:31 pm

The author takes us through all the ways the brand Barbie has experimented with giving their brands disabilities to encourage kids with them. I really enjoyed the reading as it forced me to think in someone else's shoes. Professor Hagenbuch did an amazing job on bringing scholarly sources to see the perspectives of another kid. Growing up I never spent time with Barbie toys, but it’s a very important role for parents to see the mental effect of what toys can have. Every kid has their own perspective and this journal covers that very well in constantly making sure they are not covering multiple groups when discussing disabilities. The doctors spoken to in the journal view dolls having diabetes accepting to the youth, and disheartening to type 2 . I also think that as parents it should be a role to really educate their children on their own disability. Kids often can feel left alone with their disability, but this movement really helps show its normality.

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Luke Ott
9/4/2025 08:40:23 pm

I found this article very interesting, but I respectfully don't agree with the idea of creating a Barbie with type 1 diabetes. While I understand that representation is important, I don’t think diseases should be something we normalize through toys. Children with medical conditions deserve support and empathy. Still, I feel that a doll risks making the disease the defining feature of their identity rather than highlighting their strengths and interests.

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Tahlia Lloyd
9/4/2025 10:03:08 pm

I really enjoyed this article. I support the creation of barbie dolls with type one diabetes and other diseases, but I think that the way in which these dolls are created and presented is very important. I think that seeking advice and input from the community Mattel Barbie is trying to represent is crucial. Diseases affect many people’s everyday lives, and it is so important that Mattel Barbie is respectful and sensitive of that fact. I think that there is an incredible opportunity to encourage children who deal with diseases by representing them in a positive way. As was illustrated in the article, children are so often delighted to find connections between themselves and the people and things they see around them. I understand the concern of not wanting to make disease the defining characteristic of the barbie. I believe, however, that if the Barbies are created carefully and with help from the community they are seeking to represent, these barbies have the potential to encourage and uplift children dealing with diseases.

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Larissa Zeigler
9/5/2025 02:53:32 pm

I really liked this article. I think making Barbie dolls with type one diabetes and other health conditions is a good idea, but how they’re made and shown really matters. Mattel should listen to the people they want to represent, because these conditions affect daily life in big ways. It’s important that the dolls are done in a respectful and thoughtful way.

These Barbies could give kids who live with health problems encouragement by showing them in a positive light. Like the article said, kids like seeing themselves in the world around them. I get the worry that the disease shouldn’t be the only thing that defines the Barbie, but if Mattel works carefully with the community I think that these dolls could really inspire and encourage kids who are going through it.

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Claire Heller
9/15/2025 09:04:38 pm

This article brings up a lot of great points, and I especially appreciate the outsider perspective from medical experts. I really respect Mattel for wanting to increase diversity in children's toys. So much of what young children do can be chalked up to "make believe," but it is harder to play "make believe" with things that cannot be related to. We know for a fact that social perceptions of race and the beliefs attached to them can permeate the minds of even the youngest children, as seen in the Clark Doll Study in the 1940s. I truly think it is important that kids see diversity in their toys, including medical conditions.

We cannot pretend that some medical conditions do not alter appearances, and for some kids, this can be a cause of great embarrassment and self-consciousness. By starting with the youngest kids playing with Barbie dolls, some of these conditions can be destigmatized while supporting kids who actually have the conditions portrayed in the doll. What I would have given for a Barbie to even have red hair and freckles, let alone a child with vitiligo being able to see their condition represented in a toy!

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Makayla Yellets
9/15/2025 10:13:43 pm

This was a very interesting read. It can be hard to balance diversity + inclusivity, but also not go overboard. So far, I think Mattel has been doing a decent job with this concept. I think that there are girls out there who feel like they are alone in their appearance, hobbies, or physical status. Mattel makes dolls with dozens of jobs, aesthetics, and of different physical status. Mattel is redefining the 'beauty standards,' and in my opinion has done a nice job of making every girl feel seen. It is obvious they are putting thought into each new doll, spending lots of time to make sure they are accurate to the true disease. I appreciate their dedication to making every girl make sure they have a Barbie that reflects themselves.

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Effa McCarthy
9/16/2025 09:34:51 pm

While I did enjoy reading this article, I personally disagree with a doll designed to represent Type One Diabetes. As a Type One Diabetic myself, I grew up being told my illness "Defined me". While it might encourage some children, I don't believe that a Barbie toy with a not necessarily accurate representation is beneficial.

The toy does represent pump and CGM users, but the article above clearly states that it does not accurately represent those that do not have access to said devices. Personally, I find this rather discouraging due to the fact that even though one might possess those devices, manual testing and injections are still required for anyone with Type One Diabetes. Therefore, the toy ignores the basics for proper care.

Furthermore, I believe this product is more of a cash grab rather than a thoughtful product. A child doesn't make the financial decisions in a household. An adult might view the toy as beneficial for the child when in fact it just shows the child that their disease is what defines them.

I do appreciate the effort the designers put into this doll, but I disagree with this marketing technique.

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Andrea Guiher
9/16/2025 09:49:41 pm

I think this product is truly an excellent example of mindful marketing. While there may be some elements of the Type 1 Barbie that aren't necessarily accurate in terms of the medical technology, they still allow everyone to be represented, even those with diseases. I think it is imperative that every single little girl that plays with Barbies has the ability to purchase (or have their parents purchase) a Barbie that looks like them so that they don't have to feel like there could be something wrong with them because they don't fit the classic white Barbie with blonde hair standards, despite there being nothing wrong with having a Barbie that looks like that because it does appeal to some people. The entire point of Barbie is to illustrate the idea that anyone can be anything. By making dolls for those with disabilities and dolls of different races and sizes, this helps to reinforce this point and shows that Mattel is making mindful changes to their products to further enforce the idea that anyone can be anything. Overall, I believe that uncontrollable diseases should be made into Barbies because it doesn't not prove that the disease defines the person but rather the person with the disease can truly be anything.

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Mariam Mastewal
9/16/2025 10:40:25 pm

I enjoyed this article- it brought to my attention all the different types of Barbies Mattel has created. I agree with the fact that Mattel has taken a mindful marketing approach, but I'm not sure if I necessarily agree that a doll with T1D should exist. I think the company's approach was ethical and mindful, but could be taken the wrong way by many. While inclusivity is important, marketing a doll as simply one with a disease might make children feel as though their disease is a defining factor in their life. In the aritcle, there was a thought provoking concern about children whose families might not have the money to afford the advanced technology that this doll could potentially have. This is not something I would've thought of had it not been mentioned, but it's important to take into consideration the circumstances of different customers. It's posible that this product could be marketed well because it is so different from the typical Barbie doll, and some families will definitely appreciate the representation. But, I do think that there could be some drawbacks and/or backlash.

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Elena Kole
9/17/2025 02:49:15 pm

I grew up playing with baby dolls and barbies, but because I preferred dressing up the slim, beautiful barbies to the fat and floppy baby dolls, I always liked playing with barbies better. Recently I read an article that pointed out how perfectly skinny and pretty barbies are, and how that could have negative mental effects on young girls who want to be skinny and beautiful like a barbie doll. That article along with Dr. Hagenbuch's article made me think of barbies in a whole new way. I used to look down upon barbies that stemmed away from the typical healthy and model-like look, but now I think it is good to make more barbies that children can better relate to, whether it be size or health issues. I think a lot of people's first impression of a barbie with Type One Diabetes would be something along the lines of "Ew, who would make/want a toy like that", but the more you think about it, the more it makes sense. I think barbies made with diseases or less perfect bodies are a very mindful creation that can be a true comfort for children who are suffering with the same issues and can relate to their imperfect doll.

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Addison Gurcules
9/17/2025 09:08:05 pm

I enjoyed reading this article. It brought to my attention all the different kinds of Barbie dolls Mattel has created since March 5, 1959. I enjoyed the inclusion of the different jobs the doll has impersonated through the years, and even brought back some memories of when I used to play with the dolls in my younger years. I believe that Barbie, in the past, has done a great job of incorporating what girls look like of all ages, body size, and even health issues. So, with that being said I believe that creating a doll that showcases type 1 diabetes is a great way to illuminate children who do have something they cannot help. I see the side of that it singles out children or the fact it may make some children feel left out if they are unable to afford this technology for their diabetes. However, I feel that if a child who has diabetes sees this doll, they will be seen and can relate to a toy the way someone who doesn't have diabetes. Overall, I feel Mattel was smart in creating a doll someone who has diabetes can relate to will have a positive impact on the lives of children.

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Zoe Prettyman
9/18/2025 07:45:34 am

I think it is important to create toys/dolls that normalize disabilities for children who experience disadvantages in everyday life. When children have a sense of normalcy or similarity with something they may be ashamed or embarrassed about, it can spark self-confidence that they previously lacked. No child wants to feel "weird" or "different," even something as small as a doll with their same experience can make a big impact on their self-esteem. I liked this quote from Barnes: "he believes that for some of the more than 200,000 children in the U.S. with type 1 diabetes mellitus, it could be therapeutic to play with a doll that experiences the same things they do." Children strive to feel seen. This doll accomplishes that for them.

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