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Duo-Care

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I was reading as issue of Diabetes Forecast today and saw an ad for

the Duo-Care. It is a glucose monitor and a blood pressure monitor

combined into one. Has anyone used of these? Or have any

opinions/comments? Thanks!

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>

> I was reading as issue of Diabetes Forecast today and saw an ad for

> the Duo-Care. It is a glucose monitor and a blood pressure monitor

> combined into one. Has anyone used of these? Or have any

> opinions/comments? Thanks!

Unless someone is giving them away for free..... ;-)

You can usually get a glucometer for free from someone, so I would never pay

for one... unless you had a really specific need or it was just about free

(like under $10).

Where I live, all of the pharmacies (which means Walgreens, Wal-mart and

even the major grocery stores) have blood pressure monitors available to use

for free. Unless you have been told you need to monitor your blood pressure

on an extremely regular basis, between going to the pharmacy, grocery store

and doctors office should give you an adequate sampling of blood pressure

readings.

Personally, I wouldn't waste the money. If you have a strong desire to

monitor your blood pressure more closely, or have been instructed to...

compare the price of the Duo-Care with a simple blood pressure monitor at

Walgreens or Wal-mart. In the long run it might be a better option to get

separate devices... especially depending on the cost of strips etc.

Mike

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Where I live, all of the pharmacies (which means Walgreens, Wal-mart and

even the major grocery stores) have blood pressure monitors available to use

for free.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\

------------------------------------

I can't remember off hand but I was told or read some where from a good source

that the blood pressure monitors in stores...like snyder's/wlagreens, etc....are

not as accurate than one you can buy or is used at a medical clinic. I think

the reasoning is behind the cuff size and where it squeezes you.

You can also stop in at your local fire station I believe and have your blood

pressure taken. Check with your local FS about this though first.

I have my own blood pressure monitor since I've had to monitor it since age

11. You can check with your insurance to see if they will cover it.

~Marisa

---------------------------------

Talk is cheap. Use Yahoo! Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. Great rates

starting at 1¢/min.

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Some urgent care facilities will also check your blood pressure for

free. My dad has had to do that before.

>

> Where I live, all of the pharmacies (which means Walgreens, Wal-

mart and

> even the major grocery stores) have blood pressure monitors

available to use

> for free.

>

> -----------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------

> I can't remember off hand but I was told or read some where from

a good source that the blood pressure monitors in stores...like

snyder's/wlagreens, etc....are not as accurate than one you can buy

or is used at a medical clinic. I think the reasoning is behind the

cuff size and where it squeezes you.

> You can also stop in at your local fire station I believe and

have your blood pressure taken. Check with your local FS about this

though first.

> I have my own blood pressure monitor since I've had to monitor

it since age 11. You can check with your insurance to see if they

will cover it.

>

> ~Marisa

>

>

>

>

> ---------------------------------

> Talk is cheap. Use Yahoo! Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls.

Great rates starting at 1¢/min.

>

>

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>

> I can't remember off hand but I was told or read some where from a good

> source that the blood pressure monitors in stores...like snyder's/wlagreens,

> etc....are not as accurate than one you can buy or is used at a medical

> clinic. I think the reasoning is behind the cuff size and where it squeezes

> you.

Marisa... that could be if you have a larger than normal or smaller than

normal arm. After all there is no such thing as 'one size fits all' when

you are on the extreme! :-)

Probably a good way to tell is write down your blood pressure when it's

taken in the doctors office and see how it compares when you take it at a

pharmacy at one of those machines. If it's close I'd say it's accurate.

Your blood pressure can change drastically depending on what you are doing,

so try it a couple of times. Write them all down and see how they compare

with your next doctors visit... If you have one reading that's really

different, don't stress about it, try again (or at your next stop)...

But, buy all means, if you want to buy your own blood pressure kit, go for

it!

I wonder how accurate home units are that are digital vs. the manual pump

and stethoscope method... or for that matter how well the cuffs fit since

the one's I've looked at aren't labeled 'small, medium or large.'

Mike

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When I purchase a new blood pressure machine, I always take it to my

doctors office so that it could be compared to their machine. This way

I know that my reading is close or the same as the doctors.

Dale

Begin forwarded message:

>

> Date: July 19, 2006 10:12:34 PM EDT

> To: diabetes

> Subject: Re: Re: Duo-Care

> Reply-To: diabetes

>

>

> >

> > I can't remember off hand but I was told or read some where from a

> good

> > source that the blood pressure monitors in stores...like

> snyder's/wlagreens,

> > etc....are not as accurate than one you can buy or is used at a

> medical

> > clinic. I think the reasoning is behind the cuff size and where it

> squeezes

> > you.

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I have had a digital for several years and it has been reliable. I have taken

it with me to a doctor visit and tested it against the manual pump and

stethascope. Before I purchase mine, I checked with my boss, an exercise

cardio-physiologist, and his only recommendation was not to get one that took

measurements from the wrist.

Mike schappaugh@...> wrote:

I wonder how accurate home units are that are digital vs. the manual pump

and stethoscope method... or for that matter how well the cuffs fit since

the one's I've looked at aren't labeled 'small, medium or large.'

Mike

---------------------------------

See the all-new, redesigned Yahoo.com. Check it out.

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Just to clairfy I was talking about the ones you can use for free at

the stores, not the ones you buy. I have a super skinny arm and got

mine as a child and the cuff was fine but I do know little babies and

very small children need a child's cuff and those are harder to find

to purchase I believe.

~Marisa

> >

> >

> > >

> > > I can't remember off hand but I was told or read some where

from a

> > good

> > > source that the blood pressure monitors in stores...like

> > snyder's/wlagreens,

> > > etc....are not as accurate than one you can buy or is used at

a

> > medical

> > > clinic. I think the reasoning is behind the cuff size and

where it

> > squeezes

> > > you.

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Mike, I have had my own digital BP machine since 1988 at age 11. I was

not able to be discharged from the hospital without it. So, I don't

have a choice about owning one or not really. This is becuase of a

seperate medical issue, not diabetes.

~Marisa

> But, buy all means, if you want to buy your own blood pressure kit,

go for

> it!

>

> Mike

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Marie I didn't know that. That is nice if you can go there to get

checked.

~Marisa

>

> Some urgent care facilities will also check your blood pressure for

> free.

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I understand. If this (or any other medical device or medication) is

required by your doctor... then by all means, you need to abide by their

recomendations.

I'm speaking from the point of someone who doesn't have high blood pressure

or other condition requiring the purchase of one... or even (for that

matter) someone who may have high blood pressure but has not been advised by

their physician to monitor it on a regular basis.

My physician told me that I should monitor my blood pressure, but the

occasional reading (maybe weekly) between visits was adequate, and he

specifically advised me that there was no need to purchase a blood pressure

monitor and to simply use the machines (the free ones available for public

use) at Walgreens or other pharmacies.

This whole thread started with someone asking about the Duo-Care (combined

glucometer/blood pressure monitor) and what opinions there were. I stand on

my original statement... most glucometers can be obtained for free, and

unless there is a compelling reason (i.e., instruction to monitor your blood

pressure frequently based upon physician instruction), it's probably not

worth it.

Your physician has instructed differently... please abide by those

instructions. :)

Mike

>

> Mike, I have had my own digital BP machine since 1988 at age 11. I was

> not able to be discharged from the hospital without it. So, I don't

> have a choice about owning one or not really. This is becuase of a

> seperate medical issue, not diabetes.

>

> ~Marisa

>

>

> > But, buy all means, if you want to buy your own blood pressure kit,

> go for

> > it!

> >

> > Mike

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

>

> To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

> diabetes-unsubscribe

> Hope you come back soon!

>

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Or in my case, my doctor said to monitor 3x week - sounds do-able without my

own meter, right? Hah, I'm without transportation of my own, our bus system

stinks where I am (at the end of the route, 3/4 mile to the stop with no

sidewalks, just ditches on each side of a semi-busy road, with a steep

incline at both ends) I don't mind the walk, but the whole bus thing causes

my bp to rise, and if it is hot, then I have those issues as well. Add to

this the cost of $1.50 each way.....it was cheaper & so much easier to

scrimp and juggle a few things & buy a monitor.

beth

> Re: Re: Duo-Care

>

>

> I understand. If this (or any other medical device or medication) is

> required by your doctor... then by all means, you need to abide by their

> recomendations.

>

> I'm speaking from the point of someone who doesn't have high

> blood pressure

> or other condition requiring the purchase of one... or even (for that

> matter) someone who may have high blood pressure but has not been

> advised by

> their physician to monitor it on a regular basis.

>

> My physician told me that I should monitor my blood pressure, but the

> occasional reading (maybe weekly) between visits was adequate, and he

> specifically advised me that there was no need to purchase a

> blood pressure

> monitor and to simply use the machines (the free ones available for public

> use) at Walgreens or other pharmacies.

>

> This whole thread started with someone asking about the Duo-Care (combined

> glucometer/blood pressure monitor) and what opinions there were.

> I stand on

> my original statement... most glucometers can be obtained for free, and

> unless there is a compelling reason (i.e., instruction to monitor

> your blood

> pressure frequently based upon physician instruction), it's probably not

> worth it.

>

> Your physician has instructed differently... please abide by those

> instructions. :)

>

> Mike

>

>

>

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Mike,

I have had a digital blood pressure monitor for about 10 years....I'm on

my 2nd one. I take it with me once a year when I have my physical, and

we check it against the one the doc uses. They've been virtually

identical in the readings. I guess the best thing to do to be sure it's

working correctly is get it checked out occasionally when you visit the doc.

Gail

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