Little and ring fingers are best for me tooYep. Some fingers give up blood easier (ring and little ones for me)
Its also about being well hydrated and warm, massaging from palm to finger tip before stabbing, allowing time for the drop to well up, pricking the sides not middle of the fingerprint, rotating stabbing locations and adjusting lancet depth to the minimum that is successful
So that’s probably about warmth, and possibly hydration as we pay more attention to it when it’s warm outI find that since I lost a lot of weight my fingers are a lot skinnier if that's possible! I find my fingers hurt more in winter but summer not so. Normally its like trying to get blood out of stone in winter!
I use the side of my finger but not too close to the nail and never the pad. After reading everyones reply I’ve stopped using my index finger. I’ve never used my thumbI don't use my thumb or my index finger, they were too painful. My little and ring fingers are best and I rotate between left and right.
My middle fingers are always slow to give good drop, so I only use them occasionally, mainly when it's warm.
@missmuffare you using the very sides of your fingers near the nail? Using the pads is much more painful
This is big imo. My fingers don't hurt, and I set the lancet depth as shallow as possible, to the point that sometimes it doesn't even penetrate the skin. This is fine, I just press a little harder the second time. I had a finger prick at the doctor's office that left me sore for a week, it must have been set at max depth and went to the muscle. If you're having trouble getting blood, wash with warm water first. Rotate where you're stabbing (as has been mentioned). I don't believe pain should be a requirement.and adjusting lancet depth to the minimum that is successful
When I was reading up of finger prick test I read not to use the index finger.I was told not to prick my index finger.
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