Showing posts with label strips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strips. Show all posts
Things to know before using Testing Strips
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
What is Diabetes Mellitus ? Diabetes mellitus, also commonly erred to as diabetes is a chronic, lifelong condition that affects ability of your body to use the energy derived from food. There are about three primary kinds of diabetes that people suffer from:
Type 1 Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes
Gestational Diabetes
All types of diabetes mellitus have something in common. Normally, your body breaks down the sugars and carbohydrates you consume into a special sugar erred to as glucose. Glucose works towards fuelling your body cells. However, the cells require insulin (hormone) in your bloodstream to get glucose utilize it for energy. When an individual suffers from diabetes mellitus, the body either doesnt make enough insulin or is unable to produce insulin or a combination of both.
The Testing Strips for diabetes will allow you test your blood sugar safely at home. This is the best way to monitor your blood sugar levels. The test strips are made from plastic. The last part of the strip is usually covered with enzymes. Dehydrogenise or glucose is the most common enzymes used to coat diabetes testing strips.
Here are certain things you require considering prior to buying testing strips:
The Price
Since testing strips are the costliest elements in the process of, you need to know the amount of money involved. The diabetic test strips are a monthly expense for you. So try to get these from a place where you get the lowest price. You need to research online to get compatible yet affordable testing strips for your glucose monitor.
Expiration Date
The glucose meter readings can be useless if your test strips cross expiration date. Hence, you need to always check the dates before buying them.
Coding
Many diabetic meters can coded for each batch or vial. The newer monitors dont need any coding. Make sure you look for "no coding" if you wish to avoid the coding system.
Read more for knowing about Testing Strips.
Type 1 Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes
Gestational Diabetes
All types of diabetes mellitus have something in common. Normally, your body breaks down the sugars and carbohydrates you consume into a special sugar erred to as glucose. Glucose works towards fuelling your body cells. However, the cells require insulin (hormone) in your bloodstream to get glucose utilize it for energy. When an individual suffers from diabetes mellitus, the body either doesnt make enough insulin or is unable to produce insulin or a combination of both.
The Testing Strips for diabetes will allow you test your blood sugar safely at home. This is the best way to monitor your blood sugar levels. The test strips are made from plastic. The last part of the strip is usually covered with enzymes. Dehydrogenise or glucose is the most common enzymes used to coat diabetes testing strips.
Here are certain things you require considering prior to buying testing strips:
The Price
Since testing strips are the costliest elements in the process of, you need to know the amount of money involved. The diabetic test strips are a monthly expense for you. So try to get these from a place where you get the lowest price. You need to research online to get compatible yet affordable testing strips for your glucose monitor.
Expiration Date
The glucose meter readings can be useless if your test strips cross expiration date. Hence, you need to always check the dates before buying them.
Coding
Many diabetic meters can coded for each batch or vial. The newer monitors dont need any coding. Make sure you look for "no coding" if you wish to avoid the coding system.
Read more for knowing about Testing Strips.
Storing Glucose Test Strips
Saturday, April 12, 2014
In the warmer and more humid conditions of summer, its important to store your test strips and meter away from heat and direct sunlight. Heat and moisture can damage both the strip and the meter. Manufacturers package instructions with strips that include information on their use during spells of unusual heat and humidity. Some manufacturers recommend storing strips in a dry place at room temperature, between about 68 to 86 degrees F. (This may preclude the bathroom.) Some advise against storing in the rigerator. Those that allow rigeration may state that strips should be brought to room temperature before using.
If youve recently weathered a storm, power outage, or other situation that exposed your strips to extreme conditions, er to the instructions packaged with your strips. It wouldnt be a bad idea to run a control solution or control strip through your meter as a test.
Dont Restrict Test Strips for People with Type 2 Diabetes
Thursday, February 27, 2014
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| My fasting glucose at diagnosis, versus currently. |
Type 2 diabetes is one of these misunderstood diseases; it is a hidden illness and people with hidden illnesses often end up being judged as if they had no needs, or should be restricted in needs. These attitudes often end up in discrimination, particularly from employers, health insurance companies, and some health care providers and agencies. The problem becomes compounded because type 2 diabetes is also a silent disease. It is a disease which can remain silent (not showing very many outward signs of its presence) for many years, even decades. Hence, many people will often ignore their condition because they feel fine and healthy, and the condition does not seem real to them. Because there is NOTHING telling them they are sick, they feel a certain sense of invincibility... until they get their blood glucose level tested with a finger prick. Persons with type 2 diabetes must check their blood glucose levels regularly if they are to be kept constantly aware that they a.) have a serious medical condition, and b.) that they need to adjust their food intake according to what their glucose levels are. A person with type 2 diabetes needs to be able to eat to their meter in order to be able to manage their disease.
If the medical establishment (who are constantly preaching on the diabetes pandemic, and how serious this matter is, and how the condition is costing our governments, worldwide, billions of dollars) had any inkling of the issue at hand, or indeed, if they believed their own warnings, they would realize that in order to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes, and to control the health of those with current type 2 diabetes diagnoses, we need...
- Educated clinicians: Clinicians who are not trivializing the condition to their patients, but which strive to understand the condition, its potential risks and dangers, and who are committed to empowering their patients and properly educating them as to what the condition is; and
- Access to Proper Tools and Medicines: Sufficient glucose testing strips to make appropriate nutritional decisions, from day to day, to help control glucose levels, as well as access to necessary medications -- including insulin.
How do we expect to control already diagnosed type 2 diabetes, in patients, if we will not allow patients to have an adequate amount of testing strips? Yes -- a testing strip should not just be a tool that is used to avert immediate danger (an extreme high, or an extreme low level of glucose.) A test strip is also a rudder to help a patient know to make the best, and most appropriate meal decisions, because we never know just how much glucose we have in our bodies at any given time. You cant just tell us to go eat whole wheat, grains, and fruit, and call it a day. I am sorry, medical establishment... Diabetes doesnt work that way. I have the RIGHT to know what my blood glucose is doing, and to be able to make educated decisions on what to eat, as to to reduce the risk of the potential long term complications of high blood glucose. It is my right, as a patient! You preach about the costs of diabetes, but something tells me you really do not understand how the game works. You see -- no one complains about the high cost of performing 3,000 mile oil changes on their vehicles; instead, they understand that if these are not performed, instead of paying $19.95 for an oil change, theyll end up paying over $1,000 for a new engine. But clinicians and insurance companies are practically telling people with diabetes that theyd rather they pay $1,000 for a new engine, than $19.95 for an oil change. I mean, isnt it cheaper, long term, to pay for some strips than to, oh, I dont know... have to pay for someones dialysis, new organs, eye procedures, or amputations?
Where is the common sense in the medical establishment, right now? I want to KNOW. I am SICKENED that people with type 2 diabetes who are on Medicaid in Oregon, right now, are close to being severely restricted on their glucose test strip usage. According to diaTribe,
Currently, the OHP provides 100 test strips every 90 days, but a new plan would severely restrict access to strips for type 2 patients unless they are newly diagnosed, take insulin, or meet a few other special requirements. For people not taking insulin – which covers the vast majority, about 70% of all type 2 patients – those with an A1c above 8.0% would be entitled to one test strip per week, while those with an A1c below 8.0% would not be provided with any test strips at all.This is obscene!! One test strip a week tells NOTHING to a patient with type 2 diabetes! Tests need to be done in pairs so that we can see the cause and effect of things like meals, exercise, illness or periods, or even overnight sleep. Patients with type 2 diabetes are practically being PUNISHED for having good control, and being told that their health is not important enough to merit an educated management of their disease. Besides that, patients are supposed to work hard to keep an A1C which is at or below 6.5%. Telling a person that they will only get strips if they have higher A1C levels is not only not a good recommendation, but it is also unconscionable. It is the testing that keeps me at a lower A1C! Im not psychic, for crying out loud. As of yet, there is no magical Glucose Level 8-Ball.
We need to stand together as a type 2 community against these kinds of things, or we will continue to be bullied by the medical establishment. If we are to stem the tide of unfortunate complications, and type 2 diabetes diagnoses, then we need to stand up for our rights as patients. We DESERVE education, quality treatment, tools, and medications, to manage our condition and lead healthy lives.
Really... whatever happened to the Hippocratic Oath?
DO NO HARM.
We have very little time... Please sign the petition, here: Dont Restrict Test Strips for People with Diabetes.
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