Official website for ADIYAD, a Turkish civil society association founded in May 2019 in Osmaniye to support children, youth and families living with Type 1 diabetes. Delivers mission content, news, events, a diabetes glossary and media library through a built-in bilingual admin panel with AI-assisted news aggregation.

ADIYAD (Anadolu Tip 1 Diyabet Derneği) is a civil society association founded in Osmaniye in May 2019. Its mission rests on four pillars: education (carbohydrate counting, glycemic control, diabetes technology), advocacy (equitable access to public health services and medical technology), social support (a network where patients and families don't feel alone), and awareness (public recognition of Type 1 diabetes across communities and institutions).
The public surface at anadoludiyabet.com serves four main content streams to patients, families and the general public:
/haberler) — categorized articles across research, treatment, technology, lifestyle, policy and announcements./etkinlikler) — upcoming association activities and gatherings./diyabet-sozlugu) — 37+ seeded medical terms in Turkish and English (insulin, HbA1c, DKA, CGM, etc.)./medya) — photo and media archive from events./hakkimizda, /kurumsal/sss, /iletisim) — about, FAQ, contact.Everything is managed from a custom /admin panel built into the same Next.js app. Access is gated by a hardcoded email allowlist backed by Supabase Auth, with Row Level Security enforcing read/write boundaries at the database layer. The association has no technical staff — the admin panel is designed for editorial workflow, not developer workflow.
A GitHub Actions cron runs twice daily, calling /api/admin/fetch-news, which pulls from international feeds (ADA, JDRF, Diabetes UK) and Turkish sources (Medimagazin). Each item is passed to Groq (Llama 3.3 70B) with a structured prompt that translates and summarizes the content into Turkish. Articles land as drafts in the news table; an admin then approves or rejects them before publication — so the site stays current without routine editorial effort.