If you had eaten 2 hours before the 8, it was perfectly in range Guidelines for a T2 are 4 - 7 before meals, but up to 8.5 after a meal. I may be misremembering, but I think for T1s the post-meal target is up to 9. Not an aberration at all.I eat little fat. Today it was same, very little.
8 was an abberation. It eorried because I am now doubting the validity of any of the readings.
And that (or the rather simpler test tape that I used at first) could tell you whether your BG was above (and to some extent how far above) or below some individual threshold. So of marginal value for actual management. (On the other hand the insulins were also fairly iffy, so knowing precisely what your BG was probably wouldn't have been that valuable anyway.)It wasn't that difficult TBH - just boiled 10 drops of water plus 5 drops of wee up in a miniature test tube every single morning when you went for your fist wee, by adding a Clinitest tablet to it, wait till it stopped boiling then shook the test tube (without touching the bottom of it where the liquid was, unsurprisingly it was boiling hot LOL) - and checking what colour that liquid was now.
Forgive me for asking but, considering accuracy, wbich meters do you use?
I thought that all meters would be accurate as it is so important. But apparently I am wrong.
Any recommendations?
Lol, a brilliant way of putting it. Most of science is like that!It all sounds like a game for two with one of the players using their own invisible rules.
I see my BG levels as very much like a game. Not sure if you remember the early computer games that you played on the TV and involved a slow moving game of tennis where you had a player at each side of the screen and the cursor or paddle at each side stopped the ball going off screen if you got it in the right place and the ball bounced off it and back to your opponent. I see my diabetes like that.... the screen is my range and I am constantly trying to keep it on the screen by one cursor being my Jelly babies or glucose tabs and the other being my insulin. My range is 3.9-10 as these are roughly normal range for a Non diabetic person. So if I drop below 4 I have glucose and if I get up to 10 I have insulin and if I can do that the ball stays nicely on the screen bouncing back and forth and the game continues. If I misjudge it and the ball goes off screen I am disappointed but the game isn't over... It's just that we start a new service and hopefully I learn from the mistake I made in the previous point, but there will also be times when I get distracted or don't focus enough and the ball will go out of play as well as me actually making a mistake.... and that is OK too. We are all human and can't concentrate fully all the time, but the more we practice the less genuine errors we should make.... then it is just about life sometimes getting in the way of our focus on the game and finding a balance which is acceptable is important.It all sounds like a game for two with one of the players using their own invisible rules.
Thanks for that reply. Helpful.
I'd echo all the "don't sweat the decimal points" comments, but I'd also point out that the ISO standards given by Mike upthread say "+/- 0.83 when the reading is below 5.6". So yr 4.7 then 5.4 readings are consistent with that standard.This morning...
5:55am 4.5
5:57am 4.7 sounds consistent
+/-15% gives an accuracy range of 3.99 to 5.04
Retest at 5:58am 5.4 outside the boundary for error.
So what is going on. My body will surely not change so quickly. Is the machine inaccurate. Should I even care. I am well. All readings are ok. 4.5 is edging towards concern but a way off.
Do I just see if I am below 4 or above 10 and only take action if that is the case?
How do you ensure better accuracy?
Someone used an analogy of herding kittens for managing their BG levels the other day which I thought was really apt..... it is just not a precise science.
But if the true reading was, say, 5.2 then +/- 15% gives a variation of 0.78 so all readings are identicalThis morning...
5:55am 4.5
5:57am 4.7 sounds consistent
+/-15% gives an accuracy range of 3.99 to 5.04
Retest at 5:58am 5.4 outside the boundary for error.
So what is going on. My body will surely not change so quickly. Is the machine inaccurate. Should I even care. I am well. All readings are ok. 4.5 is edging towards concern but a way off.