Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Sarcasm Alert! I've had this disease for 7 years now & these devices (or " the cure " ) are always just around the corner, or when they come out they are horribly expensive (the Glucowatch, etc.). IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, then, the strips are where they're making their money! It's sort of like the " hydrogen fuel-cell car " that everyone is waiting for to answer our energy problems when there are technologies available right now that work but aren't as glamorous & don't make good news stories. I expect these new, wonderful non-invasive testers to be available about the time that I see " pigs flying " ! End of sarcasm! , T2, etc........... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> http://www.gizmag.co.uk/go/4378/ Once again, a bloodless, jabless glucose testing method has been invented! They keep inventing more and more of these devices. I just wish they'd let us use one some day! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and have cheaper test strips. Medicare is taking over prescription meds in January and I fear getting cut back on the 300 I'm receiving now which is barely enough. Laurel IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, then, the strips are where they're making their money! \End of sarcasm! , T2, etc........... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and have cheaper test strips. Medicare is taking over prescription meds in January and I fear getting cut back on the 300 I'm receiving now which is barely enough. Laurel IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, then, the strips are where they're making their money! \End of sarcasm! , T2, etc........... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and have cheaper test strips. Medicare is taking over prescription meds in January and I fear getting cut back on the 300 I'm receiving now which is barely enough. Laurel IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, then, the strips are where they're making their money! \End of sarcasm! , T2, etc........... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 It'll never happen, . We are their cash cows, and they depend on us to buy their yachts and mansions. Sue On Saturday, August 6, 2005, at 10:34 AM, rogerhlmn@... wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish > they > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something > reasonable > instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, > then, the > strips are where they're making their money! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 It'll never happen, . We are their cash cows, and they depend on us to buy their yachts and mansions. Sue On Saturday, August 6, 2005, at 10:34 AM, rogerhlmn@... wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish > they > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something > reasonable > instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, > then, the > strips are where they're making their money! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 It'll never happen, . We are their cash cows, and they depend on us to buy their yachts and mansions. Sue On Saturday, August 6, 2005, at 10:34 AM, rogerhlmn@... wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish > they > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something > reasonable > instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, > then, the > strips are where they're making their money! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Oh, I thought we bought our dentist's yachts and mansions, LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ml Sue wrote: >It'll never happen, . We are their cash cows, and they depend on >us to buy their yachts and mansions. Sue > >On Saturday, August 6, 2005, at 10:34 AM, rogerhlmn@... wrote: > > >>IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish >>they >>would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something >>reasonable >>instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, >>then, the >>strips are where they're making their money! >> >> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Oh, I thought we bought our dentist's yachts and mansions, LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ml Sue wrote: >It'll never happen, . We are their cash cows, and they depend on >us to buy their yachts and mansions. Sue > >On Saturday, August 6, 2005, at 10:34 AM, rogerhlmn@... wrote: > > >>IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish >>they >>would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something >>reasonable >>instead of always trying to make the new high-tech breakthrough. But, >>then, the >>strips are where they're making their money! >> >> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Yes, Lou, them too, LOL. And also our pharmacists and doctors. We don't have enough money left to buy yachts and mansions for ourselves. Too bad, I wouldn't mind having a mansion, but will let you have the yacht. Sue > Oh, I thought we bought our dentist's yachts and mansions, > LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Yes, Lou, them too, LOL. And also our pharmacists and doctors. We don't have enough money left to buy yachts and mansions for ourselves. Too bad, I wouldn't mind having a mansion, but will let you have the yacht. Sue > Oh, I thought we bought our dentist's yachts and mansions, > LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Yes, Lou, them too, LOL. And also our pharmacists and doctors. We don't have enough money left to buy yachts and mansions for ourselves. Too bad, I wouldn't mind having a mansion, but will let you have the yacht. Sue > Oh, I thought we bought our dentist's yachts and mansions, > LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. Gretchen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. Gretchen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Gretchen wrote: > I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in > continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually > without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > > I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are > representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget > smaller > and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > > Gretchen Amen, sister! I wouldn't kick non-invasive out of bed were it to come along, but cheaper, continuous, and more accurate is where it should be headed. Edd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Gretchen wrote: > I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in > continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually > without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > > I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are > representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget > smaller > and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > > Gretchen Amen, sister! I wouldn't kick non-invasive out of bed were it to come along, but cheaper, continuous, and more accurate is where it should be headed. Edd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Gretchen wrote: > I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in > continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually > without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > > I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are > representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget > smaller > and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > > Gretchen Amen, sister! I wouldn't kick non-invasive out of bed were it to come along, but cheaper, continuous, and more accurate is where it should be headed. Edd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 On Sat, 6 Aug 2005 17:07:19 -0400, " Gretchen " wrote: >I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are >representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller >and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. Amen. Cheaper, more accurate and continuous. I'd rather it stick in rather than be implanted but either would be fine. --- De Armond See my website for my current email address http://www.johngsbbq.com Cleveland, Occupied TN Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore > but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and > have cheaper test strips. Hi Laurel You probably do this anyway - but I haven't posted my standard " Painless Testing " advice lately, so hopefully this may help someone: Wash your hands in warm water first, and shake them to get the circulation going. Check your lancet - it should be adjustable. Mine is Soft-clix, made by Roche and is usually painless. I get an occasional tiny sting, and it lets me know if it's getting blunt sometimes, but I've tested close to 4000 times in the past 3 years without any trauma. That's from a guy who was, and is, needle-phobic. Start with the second lowest setting (1 or 1.5), hold it firmly against your skin on the side of a finger near the tip. Don't flinch when you release the button. The button releases a spring-loaded tiny needle which makes a tiny hole in your skin and instantly retracts. Incidentally, using the sides has two advantages - there are less nerve-ends than on the pads, and it doubles the number of test-points so you can rotate through the positions. Massage gently (milking a cow) until a drop of blood forms sufficient to put on the test strip. If this setting doesn't provide an adequate quantity, move the lancet setting up one notch for the next one. If you got a large sample and it hurt a little, go to the lower setting. And that's all there is to it. Sometimes it helps to shake your hands a little more, or warm them up if it's cold. The manufacturers advise changing the lancet needle every time; I change mine when I remember or if it gets a bit blunt - that's about once a month or every 150 tests :-) You do what you are comfortable with. Cheers Alan, T2, Australia. -- Diet and not enough exercise. I have no medical qualifications beyond my own experience. Choose your advisers carefully, because experience can be an expensive teacher. Everything in Moderation - Except Laughter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore > but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and > have cheaper test strips. Hi Laurel You probably do this anyway - but I haven't posted my standard " Painless Testing " advice lately, so hopefully this may help someone: Wash your hands in warm water first, and shake them to get the circulation going. Check your lancet - it should be adjustable. Mine is Soft-clix, made by Roche and is usually painless. I get an occasional tiny sting, and it lets me know if it's getting blunt sometimes, but I've tested close to 4000 times in the past 3 years without any trauma. That's from a guy who was, and is, needle-phobic. Start with the second lowest setting (1 or 1.5), hold it firmly against your skin on the side of a finger near the tip. Don't flinch when you release the button. The button releases a spring-loaded tiny needle which makes a tiny hole in your skin and instantly retracts. Incidentally, using the sides has two advantages - there are less nerve-ends than on the pads, and it doubles the number of test-points so you can rotate through the positions. Massage gently (milking a cow) until a drop of blood forms sufficient to put on the test strip. If this setting doesn't provide an adequate quantity, move the lancet setting up one notch for the next one. If you got a large sample and it hurt a little, go to the lower setting. And that's all there is to it. Sometimes it helps to shake your hands a little more, or warm them up if it's cold. The manufacturers advise changing the lancet needle every time; I change mine when I remember or if it gets a bit blunt - that's about once a month or every 150 tests :-) You do what you are comfortable with. Cheers Alan, T2, Australia. -- Diet and not enough exercise. I have no medical qualifications beyond my own experience. Choose your advisers carefully, because experience can be an expensive teacher. Everything in Moderation - Except Laughter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > , I'm testing frequently these days and my fingers are sore > but I totally agree with you. I'd rather have sore fingers and > have cheaper test strips. Hi Laurel You probably do this anyway - but I haven't posted my standard " Painless Testing " advice lately, so hopefully this may help someone: Wash your hands in warm water first, and shake them to get the circulation going. Check your lancet - it should be adjustable. Mine is Soft-clix, made by Roche and is usually painless. I get an occasional tiny sting, and it lets me know if it's getting blunt sometimes, but I've tested close to 4000 times in the past 3 years without any trauma. That's from a guy who was, and is, needle-phobic. Start with the second lowest setting (1 or 1.5), hold it firmly against your skin on the side of a finger near the tip. Don't flinch when you release the button. The button releases a spring-loaded tiny needle which makes a tiny hole in your skin and instantly retracts. Incidentally, using the sides has two advantages - there are less nerve-ends than on the pads, and it doubles the number of test-points so you can rotate through the positions. Massage gently (milking a cow) until a drop of blood forms sufficient to put on the test strip. If this setting doesn't provide an adequate quantity, move the lancet setting up one notch for the next one. If you got a large sample and it hurt a little, go to the lower setting. And that's all there is to it. Sometimes it helps to shake your hands a little more, or warm them up if it's cold. The manufacturers advise changing the lancet needle every time; I change mine when I remember or if it gets a bit blunt - that's about once a month or every 150 tests :-) You do what you are comfortable with. Cheers Alan, T2, Australia. -- Diet and not enough exercise. I have no medical qualifications beyond my own experience. Choose your advisers carefully, because experience can be an expensive teacher. Everything in Moderation - Except Laughter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 At 04:07 PM 8/6/2005, Gretchen wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they > > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable > >I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in >continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually >without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > >I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are >representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller >and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > >Gretchen AMEN to that Gretchen! Rick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 At 04:07 PM 8/6/2005, Gretchen wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they > > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable > >I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in >continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually >without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > >I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are >representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller >and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > >Gretchen AMEN to that Gretchen! Rick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 At 04:07 PM 8/6/2005, Gretchen wrote: > > IMHO, testing as we now have it is no big deal, pain-wise so I wish they > > would work on getting the cost of the strips down to something reasonable > >I agree. I'm not at all interested in noninvasive. I'm interested in >continuous, or the ability to take as many tests as you want manually >without using strips. I'd be happy to pay a lot for such a meter. > >I suspect that some of the hundreds of lurkers on these lists are >representatives from diabetes R & D. Are you listening people? Forget smaller >and faster. Focus on cheaper and more accurate. > >Gretchen AMEN to that Gretchen! Rick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Alan, thanks for the lesson. No, I'm not doing all of that. I need to work with my lancet. I only punch my left hand since it hurts more on my right. I wash my hands often but not always in warm water just before I test. I've also been testing 15-20 times some days so lots of wounds. I'm having a problem with going low with little warning some days so testing to avoid treating if possible. I will lower my lantus again tonight and hope that helps. Laurel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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