Alastair.z70
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Insulin
I am not on insulin, so I would always prefer a meter that reads higher rather than lower - because it shows a 'worse case' scenario and motivates me towards better control. On the other hand, if I were using the meter for calculating my insulin doses, I would have different priorities.
I have so many meters my head spins. however I have decided to go with the codefree as the strips are peanuts comparatively. the codefree reads lower than my glucomen etc. I tend to look for trends rather than an absolute. Choose one that your happy with and stick with it or your head will fall offAs mentioned above check against your next HBa1c and if its close than stick with it, if its off by a mile change it, or just look for trends to adjust your eating within tolerable levels as dictated by you. good luck!
He doesn't say he's on insulin as far as I can see!@Alastair.z70 is on insulin so spotting trends is not good enough for him I'm afraid. He needs accuracy.
He doesn't say he's on insulin as far as I can see!
Sorry, that hadn't occurred to me!Then read his profile and you will see.
Sorry, that hadn't occurred to me!
When you say "3 point difference." Are you saying that one meter might read 5.0 while the other might read 8.0? Or are you referring to one saying 5.0 and the other saying 5.3? There is a huge difference between being .3 off and 3.0 off. The former would be normal while the latter would mean something is wrong with your machine.So I did a control test on the accu chek that came back as normal. I've been doing side by side test using the same blood at the same time and the closest reading is a 3 point difference and tge worst is a nine-point difference. The accu chek is always the lower reading.
I've been exempt for 15 yrs as I have a urostomy only started insulin two months agowhoops! or me, I just assumed type 2 on tablets. sorry!
Note: Accu-Chek meters measure plasma blood glucose compared to some meters that may measure "Whole blood." However, it would be more typical for a plasma blood meter to read about 12% HIGHER than a whole blood meter.
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