I am having exactly the same issues. Especially with lows. This is a problem for me because my job depends on my diabetes being well controlled. We're definitely not getting all the information about how the scanner works.The manual says readings may be inaccurate when sugars are rising or falling rapidly (which has been frustratingly often just recently).
I've also seen several mentions on here of a delay of somewhere between 5 and 15 minutes compared to blood tests.
However, it seems to me that it is not simply a fixed delay. Sometimes I take a reading when it is falling fast and get a low reading of, say 3.0, then a while after I have treated the hypo I scan again and look back at the graph and it then shows the lowest it got before coming back up was 4.0 or more. Same thing with fast rising and high readings.
It looks to me like it is extrapolating. So it knows its interstitial fluid reading is behind the blood, and based on the current rate of change it tries to match what the blood actually is currently. The manual distinguishes between levels measured and levels reported, which would fit this.
Does this match with your experience? (and do you think it is linear or higher order?)
Also, when we look back at the recorded data, are the actual IF readings already appropriately shifted back to give the approximate blood reading at that time?
I'm trying to get a better understanding of the time taken for different doses/foods to affect me, and it's a bit annoying that Abbott aren't open about this, and the meter doesn't distinguish between what it is actually reading and what is an informed guess. I'd rather it showed the extrapolated part of the curve in a different colour at least.
Hi -I am having exactly the same issues. Especially with lows. This is a problem for me because my job depends on my diabetes being well controlled. We're definitely not getting all the information about how the scanner works.
I have been unable to find OOP2 app neither on iPhone AppStore nor Android PlayStore. Any suggestions, please?@Westley I found xDrip+ easy to set up with OOP2 for Libre2. In fact there is very little to change from the Libre 1 settings as long as you have OOP2 running to hijack the Bluetooth alarm signal.
As before you will not populate LinkView for your doc but you get he calibration, current value on the lock screen, no need for scanning (apart from the start the sensor) and more alarms than LibreLink.
None of these unofficial apps are approved by the app store or Play store.I have been unable to find OOP2 app neither on iPhone AppStore nor Android PlayStore. Any suggestions, please?
Thank you. I will try that.None of these unofficial apps are approved by the app store or Play store.
If you want to try xDrip+ for Android (there is a different app for iphone), these need to be downloaded from GitHub. The detailed instructions are available from the Files tab of the xDrip Facebook group. This is a closed Facebook group but they seem to accept anyone.
I found this all easy to follow and setup. However, I work in IT.
I came to the same conclusion with all the points, through personal experienceThe manual says readings may be inaccurate when sugars are rising or falling rapidly (which has been frustratingly often just recently).
I've also seen several mentions on here of a delay of somewhere between 5 and 15 minutes compared to blood tests.
However, it seems to me that it is not simply a fixed delay. Sometimes I take a reading when it is falling fast and get a low reading of, say 3.0, then a while after I have treated the hypo I scan again and look back at the graph and it then shows the lowest it got before coming back up was 4.0 or more. Same thing with fast rising and high readings.
It looks to me like it is extrapolating. So it knows its interstitial fluid reading is behind the blood, and based on the current rate of change it tries to match what the blood actually is currently. The manual distinguishes between levels measured and levels reported, which would fit this.
Does this match with your experience? (and do you think it is linear or higher order?)
Also, when we look back at the recorded data, are the actual IF readings already appropriately shifted back to give the approximate blood reading at that time?
I'm trying to get a better understanding of the time taken for different doses/foods to affect me, and it's a bit annoying that Abbott aren't open about this, and the meter doesn't distinguish between what it is actually reading and what is an informed guess. I'd rather it showed the extrapolated part of the curve in a different colour at least.
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