For me, about 50% of the readings have been way above the fingerprick (if above range), or severely below if below range. I do not use Abbot blood meters/strips (had a bad experience years ago, go new batch of strips, almost noe worked)
I've also given up on the alarms - if it wakes me up, either I was actually ok but then had to spend hours getting back to sleep, or else I was low but it took so long to record the effect of the dextrosol tablets that I could not reinstate the alarm except at a stupidly low level.
For me, a reading of perhaps 6 or 7 could be a good time to look at the graph and maybe take more (slow-acting) carbs, but you cannot set the low level that high.
And I cannot see the point of setting a high-level alarm for a type 1 : if I'm having to go for a #1 and generally feeling hot then I know I'm high without an alarm.
Ken
I've also given up on the alarms - if it wakes me up, either I was actually ok but then had to spend hours getting back to sleep, or else I was low but it took so long to record the effect of the dextrosol tablets that I could not reinstate the alarm except at a stupidly low level.
For me, a reading of perhaps 6 or 7 could be a good time to look at the graph and maybe take more (slow-acting) carbs, but you cannot set the low level that high.
And I cannot see the point of setting a high-level alarm for a type 1 : if I'm having to go for a #1 and generally feeling hot then I know I'm high without an alarm.
Ken