So many variables of when to test, ie before walks, after walks, with metformin without it.
Once you see results, it will help with forming good routines.
If I take a 500mg tablet before a half hour walk, my levels will drop to 5.2 from 6.5
I wouldn't do this. You are wasting strips. It is best to be organised with your testing, have a consistent routine, record everything, and most importantly you need to decide why you want to test and what you hope to learn from it. Unless you learn from it, again, you are wasting your time.
So many variables of when to test, ie before walks, after walks, with metformin without it.
Once you see results, it will help with forming good routines.
If I take a 500mg tablet before a half hour walk, my levels will drop to 5.2 from 6.5
Metformin is not likely to have this kind of effect on bg. It is likely that the walking itself affects your bg. Metformin is precribed to help the liver, it takes a while to build up in the body and should be taken at the dosage and times prescribed.
All brands of meters have to pass the same accuracy standards before they can be marketed. This is basically plus or minus 15% of the true value. No meter is absolutely accurate, and unless you have to inject insulin according to what your levels are, accuracy doesn't matter too much. All we are doing is looking for trends. I know it isn't good enough, but I'm afraid it is all we have.
Thank you, that is useful information. I know the meters won't be as accurate as lab results, yes I am looking for trends and also foods that cause spikes.
I won't be on insulin, they will give me a tablet starting the middle of January. I also have high blood pressure which was only recently diagnosed.
Information/advice pretty much non existent at my surgery.
To check my meter is working i check someone ie my sin who is not diabetic....my son gets a reading if 5 so if his is still around this figure i know it is working correctly x