michaeldavid
Well-Known Member
The first posting I made on this forum (some months ago) concerned Betachek Visual test strips, and the constant difficulty that I experienced obtaining them in the UK.
Happily, I should now experience no further such difficulties. For the Australian manufacturer, National Diagnostic Products, have finally sorted out the UK version of their internet store. And Betachek Visual can now be purchased on-line, in pounds sterling, here: http://www.betachek.com/uk/store
The price is £15.50 for 100 strips, plus £7.50 postage. But if extra packs are ordered, the postage remains the same. (Strange to tell, Betachek Visual are on the UK Drug Tariff; but there is currently no UK supplier.)
I would certainly recommend purchasing at least two packs. For with a good pair of scissors, each of the strips can be cut into up to five striplets. (This brings the cost down to just a few pence per test.) And if the few in-use striplets are kept in one tube, and the bulk of the uncut strips in the other tube, then the life of the uncut strips will not be reduced.
The control I manage to achieve over my blood-sugar is exceptionally good. (My last two HbA1c readings were 4.6% or 27 mmol/mol.) And I certainly couldn't achieve this control economically without Betachek Visual.
However, they won't be much use to anyone who doesn't have good control over their blood-sugar. For although they're very accurate for reading under 8mmol/l, they're not so accurate for anything higher. But my blood-sugar is almost always under 8mmol/l due to the insulin regimen I exercise and due also to my dietary regimen.
DAFNE is daft: if you're diabetic, you shouldn't even attempt to eat normally. So instead, what I do is 'feed the insulin' I take: I don't adjust my insulin much at all - I don't need to. And crucially, when I go to bed at night the insulin has run its course. (I take just a little long-acting insulin last thing to prevent my blood-sugar rising overnight.) So I always know that I can sleep safely.
I test my blood-sugar around 15-20 times per day, mostly using Betachek Visual. (I tend to use meter-read sticks only first thing in the morning and last thing at night; at any other time, the decimal-point accuracy of meter-read sticks is superfluous.)* And I very often get readings below 4mmol/l, throughout the day. But this is not a problem: I hardly ever get hypos.
I hardly ever get hypos on account of what I eat: dark rye bread (mostly) throughout the morning and into the late afternoon. Eating rye bread has a dramatically moderating effect on my blood-sugar. I still have to be careful: I am not immune to hypos. But I always get time to react. My blood-sugar never CRASHES.
*Meter-read sticks are not always so accurate, anyway. (Who hasn't had a false reading from a meter?!) And when you do get a false reading, there is nothing in the meter's visual display to indicate the reading's falsity. (It's now 11.00pm; and using OneTouch Ultra, I've just tested last thing - but I do it twice: the first reading was 4.7, the second was 4.2mmol/l; and that's a very significant difference.) But with visually read strips, there is such a warning: if I fail to clean my finger properly (after eating something sweet), then when I wipe the blood from the testing strip the reading given will be visibly smudgy. Visually read strips give FEELING. Meter readings are inert.
Happily, I should now experience no further such difficulties. For the Australian manufacturer, National Diagnostic Products, have finally sorted out the UK version of their internet store. And Betachek Visual can now be purchased on-line, in pounds sterling, here: http://www.betachek.com/uk/store
The price is £15.50 for 100 strips, plus £7.50 postage. But if extra packs are ordered, the postage remains the same. (Strange to tell, Betachek Visual are on the UK Drug Tariff; but there is currently no UK supplier.)
I would certainly recommend purchasing at least two packs. For with a good pair of scissors, each of the strips can be cut into up to five striplets. (This brings the cost down to just a few pence per test.) And if the few in-use striplets are kept in one tube, and the bulk of the uncut strips in the other tube, then the life of the uncut strips will not be reduced.
The control I manage to achieve over my blood-sugar is exceptionally good. (My last two HbA1c readings were 4.6% or 27 mmol/mol.) And I certainly couldn't achieve this control economically without Betachek Visual.
However, they won't be much use to anyone who doesn't have good control over their blood-sugar. For although they're very accurate for reading under 8mmol/l, they're not so accurate for anything higher. But my blood-sugar is almost always under 8mmol/l due to the insulin regimen I exercise and due also to my dietary regimen.
DAFNE is daft: if you're diabetic, you shouldn't even attempt to eat normally. So instead, what I do is 'feed the insulin' I take: I don't adjust my insulin much at all - I don't need to. And crucially, when I go to bed at night the insulin has run its course. (I take just a little long-acting insulin last thing to prevent my blood-sugar rising overnight.) So I always know that I can sleep safely.
I test my blood-sugar around 15-20 times per day, mostly using Betachek Visual. (I tend to use meter-read sticks only first thing in the morning and last thing at night; at any other time, the decimal-point accuracy of meter-read sticks is superfluous.)* And I very often get readings below 4mmol/l, throughout the day. But this is not a problem: I hardly ever get hypos.
I hardly ever get hypos on account of what I eat: dark rye bread (mostly) throughout the morning and into the late afternoon. Eating rye bread has a dramatically moderating effect on my blood-sugar. I still have to be careful: I am not immune to hypos. But I always get time to react. My blood-sugar never CRASHES.
*Meter-read sticks are not always so accurate, anyway. (Who hasn't had a false reading from a meter?!) And when you do get a false reading, there is nothing in the meter's visual display to indicate the reading's falsity. (It's now 11.00pm; and using OneTouch Ultra, I've just tested last thing - but I do it twice: the first reading was 4.7, the second was 4.2mmol/l; and that's a very significant difference.) But with visually read strips, there is such a warning: if I fail to clean my finger properly (after eating something sweet), then when I wipe the blood from the testing strip the reading given will be visibly smudgy. Visually read strips give FEELING. Meter readings are inert.