I'm sure I have seen DUK (and Partha Kar) mention that concern. I agree completely but I'm not holding my breath for anything to happen.
Perhaps it won't be immediately effective, but there is a general push towards people owning their own data across platforms, so might as well try. One would also hope that if the NHS (and other medical commissioning groups across the world) saw some value in people having easy access to their data and made this a requirement for their accreditation/recommendation it might make a difference.
Wishful thinking perhaps, but one might as well try. In the meantime reverse engineering and write-your-own open source version it is
🙂
I didn't notice that so much as excitement that (specifically) the smart pens make it much easier to track the data.
I might ask for a smartpen now I know they are a standard thing, not that I think it will make a vast difference but one fewer thing for me to add to XDrip by hand.
But perhaps I just didn't notice it; personally, anything that's not really easy for me to record isn't going to get recorded in the long term. (I can cope with making good records for food, BG readings, insulin dosing, but only for about a week.)
It was the comments, towards the middle of the conference, from one of the consultants about not needing/wanting his patients to come in with reams of data, but rather that he'd ask them how their blood glucose was and see if they knew what was going on or had questions. I may have misremembered/misinterpreted his point.
I must admit I've been logging blood glucose and food data electronically for years (since I had a Libre device), with the goal of investigating predictive modelling algorithms. I've become quite used to doing it, though I now have a massive amount of "legacy" text-based data (I chose an existing app that was good enough as a stop-gap, and I'm still using it but it's still a stop-gap). That data will need to be post-processed to be useful and it would likely be easier to start from scratch with a purpose built database-based app and import the old data once I get round to processing it.
The XDrip+ prediction works well enough that I'm more than happy to input data to that, but the prediction algorithm could be improved and the most useful aspect would be to integrate the logging of more than just carbs (i.e. a full food & exercise diary type app) so I could easily query what happened on the last occasions I ate X food - how much insulin did I take, was I running low/high beforehand, what happened to blood glucose afterwards, etc.
I have started to write things (Android apps), but then get busy with other projects/life and Android moves on (which means when I come back to the code, it generally needs to be updated to meet the new guidance). I must try to knuckle down and get something up and running, though perhaps there are other things out there that people use, which I've not seen, that do a reasonable job - I'll have a search through the appropriate sub-forum (Pumping and Technology I guess) and then post a question.