Skip to main content
Shared experience

Where there’s a will, there’s a way

Jubie talks about her daughter’s diagnosis, how this inspired her to launch Sugarplum Children to fundraise for type 1 research, and how type 1 technology helps with managing the condition.

Jubie Wigan and her daughter stood smiling at the camera alongside former British Prime Minister Theresa May at Sugarplum fundraising ball for type 1 diabetes

Aliena’s diagnosis

In January 2012, Lady Jubie Wigan’s daughter, Aliena, was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at the age of two-and-a-half. Aliena had been displaying symptoms of an insatiable appetite, unquenchable thirst and frequent bed wetting. The GP sent Aliena to A&E where she was admitted to the Critical Paediatric Unit and diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. The diagnosis turned Jubie’s life upside-down as the family learned how to deal with the unrelenting routine of blood glucose checks and insulin injections.

Launching Sugarplum Children

Shortly after Aliena’s diagnosis, Jubie, who is the daughter of the Earl of Balfour, launched Sugarplum Children. Her motto has always been ‘Where there’s a will, there’s a way’. Sugarplum Children has two aims: to raise money for type 1 diabetes research, through the type 1 charity Breakthrough T1D UK, and raise awareness about type 1 diabetes.

Galvanising her friends and supporters, Jubie has now hosted four Sugarplum fundraising dinners (every other year from 2013-2019) with celebrities and high-profile guests, including now Breakthrough T1D UK Ambassador, The Rt Hon Theresa May MP, Jeremy Irvine and James Norton (who all live with the condition) as well as Pippa Middleton, Julian Fellowes, Florence Welch, and Mark Ronson. Sugarplum Children has also sold an exclusive Sugarplum pendant designed by Annoushka Ducas MBE, and organised the Sugarplum Dog Walk – an idea that came from Aliena herself. In November 2021 Jubie and a team of 11 women, six of whom are either living with type 1 or have a child or family member living with it, or affected by type 1 diabetes, raised over £70,000 on a 100km trek through Wadi Rum in Jordan.

To date, Sugarplum Children has raised over £3 million. In recognition of her charitable work, Jubie was awarded the Point of Light in 2016 by the then Prime Minister Theresa May, which recognises outstanding individual volunteers who are making a change in their community and inspiring others.

Starting to use type 1 diabetes technology

10 years on from her diagnosis Aliena now uses an insulin pump and a continuous glucose monitor and is due to start on the artificial pancreas in the spring, which she will access through the NHS. Jubie has always raised money for type research and treatments, particularly research into the artificial pancreas.

The artificial pancreas uses an algorithm to automatically deliver insulin from a pump based on readings from a continuous glucose monitor. In programming and delivering insulin as needed minute to minute, the technology can significantly lift the burden of managing type 1 diabetes.

For Jubie, this is the power and impact of her fundraising work: Aliena and hundreds of thousands of other people living with type 1 stand to benefit from the artificial pancreas, research which has been supported and realised through Sugarplum and Breakthrough T1D UK fundraising.

More shared experiences

Read more
A young woman standing in front of a river looking directly into the camera.
27 January 2026

My life as a teenager with hybrid closed loop 

Living with type 1 diabetes as a busy teenager can be a constant balancing act but using a hybrid closed‑loop system has transformed how Eden Valk approaches school, exercise and even sleep. Here she tells us more about how this technology fits into her life.

Read more
A photo of Manisha feeding her newborn son
27 January 2026

"The technology that’s given me peace of mind"

We caught up with new mum Manisha to find out how hybrid closed loop technology has supported her post-partum journey.

Read more
A young girl with type 1 diabetes wearing a football kit and holding a medal up
Shared stories
19 December 2025

"A cure is the miracle we dream of"

Mark and Eilidh tell us about their daughter Charlotte’s journey with type 1 diabetes, from the first warning signs to life after diagnosis, the technology that helps her thrive, and their hopes for a cure.

Read more
A head and shoulders photograph of an older woman wearing red glasses and smiling at the camera
Shared stories
18 November 2025

After 55 years of living with T1D I usually know how my body responds

I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 1970, when I was 27. I became very unwell and weak; I wasn’t particularly thirsty, which is the first thing everybody assumes. I felt similar to when I had had glandular fever in 1965.

Connect with us on social