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> This is an instance where technology could (and should) help. The code > number should be written onto each strip and read electronically by the > meter when the strip is inserted into it, thus obviating _another_ source > of human error.
There is one meter/strip manufacturer that does that. IIRC, the brand is even more expensive than the ~$0.80 per strip I grumble about at the pharmacy.
Cindy Wells (I'll stick to my cheaper tester and remember to change the codes myself. Although I might consider getting the $30 cable if the connection was two-way and I could correct the code number while uploading the test results.)
Alan Mackenzie
17 Oct 2005 13:22
Thelma Lubkin <thelma@alpha2.csd.uwm.edu> wrote on 11 Oct 2005 23:25:08 GMT:
> My husband just noticed that he's gone through about 20 strips with > his Freestyle blood glucose monitor code set to 17 when it should have > been set to 12. He's not expecting to correct those readings with any > precision, but does anyone know at least what direction the correction > would go in, and better yet a back of the envelope algorithm for a > reasonable guess?
If the manufacturer were to be cooperative (fat chance), they could be corrected _exactly_.
This is an instance where technology could (and should) help. The code number should be written onto each strip and read electronically by the meter when the strip is inserted into it, thus obviating _another_ source of human error.
> thanks, --thelma
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Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany) Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter (like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a").
Thelma Lubkin
11 Oct 2005 23:25
My husband just noticed that he's gone through about 20 strips with his Freestyle blood glucose monitor code set to 17 when it should have been set to 12. He's not expecting to correct those readings with any precision, but does anyone know at least what direction the correction would go in, and better yet a back of the envelope algorithm for a reasonable guess?