Thank you! I'll try that if no one here knowsCan't help with your answers I'm afraid, but what I can tell you is that there help desk is awesome! When I was looking at it I mailed them a couple of times and got very, very quick responses. Often within the hour.
Give them a try.
Thank you! That makes things a bit clearer. I'm thinking that a deviation of +/-0.2 is good according to the premise that it should read less than a third of your average (as per Gary Scheiner). I think I understand it to be a measurement of the difference between highest and lowest? Indicating that my levels are not swinging madly.Havnt had the chance yet to compare the estimate to a lab test, but things I read on various diabetes foums before getting the app were generally v positive re how indicative the estimates are - time will tell!
https://mysugr.com/hba1c-whats-behind-this-important-test/
The variation is your mean variation in levels, from lowest to highest with several tweaks done by the app. My Accu chek Mobile will also produce this variation level, but of course the calculation isn't a straightforward difference between highest and lowest. The average is calculated, then any above or below that average are calibrated somehow to produce a standard variation.
That's good to know. I do understand that even with my eight readings a day that spikes and dips can be missed. I'll let you know how accurate it proves to be for me next month when I have my next HbA1cI use MySugr - the HbA1C number is an estimate, and probably is missing spikes directly after eating. My last blood test gave me HbA1C of 39, whilst the app was more often aroubd 34/35. Ive read posts from other people with similar lab figures a bit higher than the estimate
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