Blood Glucose Meters

Click here for a pdf of currently available blood glucose meters
The blood glucose meter is one tool that many people with diabetes can’t do without. Whether you prick your finger many times a day or less often, checking your glucose levels is an important part of managing your diabetes. And so choosing a meter that suits you and helps provide you and your health care team with vital information is a task for which a little preparation can pay big dividends.
Blood glucose meters have changed significantly, and for the better, since they first became available for home use 30 years ago. Those early meters required large drops of blood that were more painful to squeeze out than the tiny samples now typically needed (see next page). Today’s lancets, outfitted with spring-loaded lancing devices, can puncture the skin quickly and with minimal discomfort. Improved test strips wick up the blood sample easily, results are available within seconds, and meters have fewer testing errors than in the past. Yet meter accuracy has become a hot-button issue, and manufacturers may be forced to meet a higher standard (read more, here).
Despite the advances in self-monitoring of blood glucose, if you are newly diagnosed with diabetes, learning how to test yourself and how to deal with the results can still be daunting. If you’re buying your first meter, you’re probably considering all the ways your life will change now that you have diabetes, and now that you’re testing. Not all meters are created equal, and there can be many choices to make when selecting a model.
What Will It Cost?
The price tag on the meter itself isn’t the key. In fact, a lot of the time your meter will be free or reduced from its retail price, thanks to rebates and other discounts from the manufacturer, or because insurance will pay for it. You may even be able to get a free one from your doctor or educator. What does add up is the long-term cost of test strips: They can run anywhere from 50 cents to $1 per strip. Even if you test only twice a week, that could come to $104 a year in test strips. If you test five times a day, you may be looking at $1,820. If you have health insurance, it usually will cover some of the cost, but how much and how many strips are covered can vary by insurer and by the type of diabetes you have. Always check with your insurance provider before choosing a meter, because insurers often only cover test strips and meters manufactured by one particular company. And remember that when it’s time to buy new test strips, you’ll have to buy a brand that is compatible with your meter.
Keep in mind, too, that not all meters come with accessories. You may need to separately purchase a carrying case, a lancing device and lancets, control solution, containers for sharps disposal (though many household items, like plastic laundry detergent jugs, will work), a logbook, and computer software to go with your blood glucose meter. And you’ll also want to plan on periodically replenishing your supply of lancets and control solution.
Talk About It
Your doctor or diabetes educator may not know all the details of your insurance plan, but he or she will be able to help you select a meter. Discuss which brands are best and which components matter most to you: Do you want your meter to be very small? Do you want all the extras, including graphs of test results? Your pharmacist may be able to help, too: Ask about pharmacy discount cards and about saving by buying test strips in bulk. And then talk with friends who have diabetes—especially someone whose job or lifestyle is like yours. Ask them if you can try out their meters (using your own lancets, of course). You can also compare notes with others online at sites like the American Diabetes Association message boards.
Next: Features that matter.





Comments
Glucose Meter that a prick on the finger is not needed.
My father has diabetes, he saw on TV a meter that a prick on the finger is not needed to test your levels. Is this a good product? I do not see it on your website. I was thinking and these products are not very accurate. Please advice.
Alternate Site testing
As a healthcare provider, I get this question a lot. The ad is referring to alternate site testing (forearm, thigh, etc). You need blood for all of these meters to work. If alternate site testing interests you, please do your research. A result for a fingertip test vs forearm will produce different results, sometimes significant. Your fingertips are always the most accurate.
Alternate Site Testing
Alternate site testing is available now for most brands on the market, including major brands such as Bayer, Abbott, LifeScan and Roche. Always make sure to get training/instruction around proper alternate site practices from a diabetes educator or physician. Also, read the instructions provided by the manufacturer. Lastly, understand that with current blood glucose meter technology the best site to get the most accurate result for self monitoring is the finger. If someone is has pain when testing from their finger, first check when the last time the lancet was replaced. Lancets are inexpensive. Second, what is the setting on the lancet device? Most of the time one can get a sufficient sample amount from using the lowest setting. Third, what part of the finger is being used? Many individuals start off utilizing the tips of their fingers, which is the most sensitive. It is much better to use the side of the finger. Ask a diabetes educator or physician about these techniques.
Glucose Meter that a prick on the finger is not needed
There is a commong assumption made by the viewer there there is no pricking involved in the actual blood glucose test. Most advertisements of this kind present a device that does not require to prick your finger; and thats where the catch is. The test DOES REQUIRE to prick your body in order to get a blood sample, its just that the new devices on the market allow what is called AST - Alternative Site Testing. This testing is just as accurate if you follow the instructions from the manufacturer. Sabena Beriy RN, MSN
Testing supplies & meds
I am 62 years old, still working. I have company provided insurance and some other health problems for which I take meds. I am trying to locate some place that I may get a break on my testing supplies. I have an Accu Check Aviva which is just fine but the coding is a pain. I won't qualify for Medicare for 3 more years and this is a struggle. By the time I pay all my responsible copays, I have little funding to survive. Any suggestions? Thank you.
finger prick
meters that do not prick fingers are probably going to require pricking an arm. The arm doesn't work for everyone, and can leave some small bruising.
He should see a diabetes educator.
All tv ads are trying to collect medicare dollars by convincing you that you need a product and excess strips, for which medicare gets billed alot. Tremendous amount of fraud here.
See a diabetes educator and don't be fooled by easy ads.
Former Certified diabetes Educator, now retired.
The meter he saw is probably
The meter he saw is probably an alternate site meter, meaning that he can test on his palm or forearm which may be less painful for him. These meters still draw a blood sample. However, it may be difficult to get a large enough sample size for an accurate reading. Talk to his endocrinologist or diabetes educator for recommendations.
Bayer Contour USB meter and Glucofacts software
Pros: convenient size, rechargeable battery, software preinstalled in the meter memory
Cons: won't run on the latest mac osx 10.6.x
Model Number: Bayer Contour usb 7393
"I was very encouraged to see finally that there was a blood glucose meter that would work with software on a Mac to chart readings. In the past there have been some meager attempts to do this but for most there was no feature that facilitated uploading data from the meter. The Contour usb promised to fill that gap so I bought one shortly after the Costco e-mail arrived.
The meter is the convenient size and shape of a USB flash drive and has built in memory with Glucofacts preloaded and ready to install. It has a built in rechargeable battery which can be charged by the included AC adapter or on the high power USB port on a computer (the battery is rated at 5 year lifespan and is not replaceable).
What is not to like about this meter for a Mac user? The Glucofacts software won't run on the current Mac OSX 10.6 (Snow Leopard) which was released September '09. The Bayer technical assistance representative could only offer that the company had not yet tested the Glucofacts software with the latest Mac OS but they would be working on it
For Mac users with diabetes it is the same old story, one has to install Windows or buy a PC if you want to manage blood glucose information."
Blood Glucometers
Why don't any of these products permit the user to download the data to the computer easily? USB 2 should be included with every one.
Glucose meter
My elderly aunt has heard of a glucose meter that does not require blood to be drawn. The meter is apparently passed over the heart. Is there such a thing?
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