Our insurance company would not pay much on a glucometer so financially we went with the Wal-Mart version wich was cheap and the strips are $9 for 20.
This past week a friend from church who works at the hospital brought me a brand new higher end Lifestyle glucometer and 30 strips.
I personally didnt figure here would be much of a difference in the readings. Boy was I wrong.
Last night after dinner I set both up side by side had them on and ready, pricked my finger and tested on both at the same time.
Walmart brand score 98
Lifestyle brand score 87
This morning I tested my fasting on the lifestyle only.
Normally my fasting with the walmart is in the low 80s
The lifestyle this morning was 67
I have a Dr. appt next week so I am going to talk to him about this. If it even matters to him. But my test scores even with the cheaper one were always under the cut off but with the new one they are super low as in normal with out GD low.
Our problem is we can not afford the test strips for the lifestyle... our insurance wont pay for them and they are quite pricey. So I have enough for 2 weeks after that it will be back to the cheaper ones.
Re: The great meter test... this is interestingly odd
I would check with your office staff and see if they know of programs to help with prescription coverage that you might qualify for. Insurance covered all my testing/insulin supplies in both pregnancies, but when we were first married and had crappy in
DD1 Feb 2010
DD2 Sept 2011
The differences you are experiencing are within the acceptable margin of discrepancy between meters and even between finger pricks on the same meter (yes, you can get different readings that mimic what you experienced using the SAME meter testing twice
Typically, my insurance only pays for a Precision meter. Now that I have an insulin pump and I'm pregnant, they will pay for Freestyle strips to use with the pump. When I'm under 100, the discrepancy is within the 10% much like yours. But as I creep ov