It's good to see that you're working out daily averages for yourself. It's a good way to check up on your control.
Does your testing machine have on it a function that'll tell you your average? I know that there are some on the market that do tell you what your average is itself.
In answer to your question though, yes, that makes it 7.5 as your average. Rounding laws in maths hold that if the smallest digit is 5 or above, you round up, and if it is 4 or below, you round down. Example 7.44=7.4 and 7.45=7.5.
It will have, they mostly all have daily, weekly, 30 day and 90 day averages. Failing that, there are many apps that you can enter daily reading into that will chart and average your numbers for you.
There is also a calculator on this website that will convert your average into a fairly good indicator of the equivalent hba1c result. 7.5 equates to an hba1c of around 6.3%.
It will have, they mostly all have daily, weekly, 30 day and 90 day averages. Failing that, there are many apps that you can enter daily reading into that will chart and average your numbers for you.
There is also a calculator on this website that will convert your average into a fairly good indicator of the equivalent hba1c result. 7.5 equates to an hba1c of around 6.3%.
Converting from HbA1c to average blood glucose is ok but I can't see how it can work the other way round unless you are metering continuously. The meter or a calculator only averages the values at the time you test so ignores the long periods of time in between.
Converting from HbA1c to average blood glucose is ok but I can't see how it can work the other way round unless you are metering continuously. The meter or a calculator only averages the values at the time you test so ignores the long periods of time in between.
From what I've seen, if you're metering every morning, before meals and at 1 and 2 hours and at bed time, the average is extremely close to hba1c over time.