innilus
Active Member
- Messages
- 26
- Location
- Birmingham
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Unappreciative people, Stress, Facebook
Just wanted to know about the different monitors people use and the good and bad points about them. Does it hook up to your computer or an app which provides you with detailed statistical data, do the batteries last long, do you struggle to get prescriptions for them or is it just too big. Anything you can think of and your rating out of 10.
I have an Accu-Chek Aviva Nano and it's pretty basic.
Good:
It's small
Quick and easy to use
The multiclix finger pricker with 6 lancets in 1
Small amount of blood needed for test strip
Bad:
Battery life (I've bought fresh well known brand of batteries and got the low battery warning or E-9 error code on first use)
Multiclix finger pricker hurts more than others seem to (haven't tried the new Fastclix version)
No detailed results (Can't record detailed info like how long after you've eaten that you did the test. Only does 7, 14, 30 and 90 day averages)
Doesn't connect to a computer (as far as I know)
5/10
I have an Accu-Chek Aviva Nano and it's pretty basic.
Good:
It's small
Quick and easy to use
The multiclix finger pricker with 6 lancets in 1
Small amount of blood needed for test strip
Bad:
Battery life (I've bought fresh well known brand of batteries and got the low battery warning or E-9 error code on first use)
Multiclix finger pricker hurts more than others seem to (haven't tried the new Fastclix version)
No detailed results (Can't record detailed info like how long after you've eaten that you did the test. Only does 7, 14, 30 and 90 day averages)
Doesn't connect to a computer (as far as I know)
5/10