nutritiongirl22
Member Since 2014
Hi Everyone!
I know there are a lot of posts out there about which meters are reliable for kitties and pros/cons for each. My kitty just went in for his first curve today and I was in shock by how off my meter was. On the advice of my diabetic boyfriend, I bought the CVS True2go meter. He said this one had good reviews and was inexpensive. I'd checked 007's blood sugar 4 times in the past week and his values ranged 160-186. It just didn't make sense. His blood sugar from diagnosis at the lab had been 416 one of those same days.
Today I compared our vet Accu-chek Aviva to mine side by side, same blood drop. The Aviva was 316 and the True2go was 157. On me, the Aviva was 98 and True2go was 92. I suspected it was inaccurate - something was not making sense - but how inaccurate it was shocked me. Since I work at a vet, I did his urinalysis myself so I also knew how much glucose he was spilling in his urine.
I have looked at everyone's recommendations and it looks like a lot of people have ReliOn meters and strips because they are very cost-effective. I've also gotten the recommendation from my vet to purchase an Accu-chek meter. I jumped the gun and bought one at Wal-mart tonight for $25, opened it up and the 2 bottles of test strips had been swiped from the starter pack. So I got online to look at pricing and found that you can get a FREE Accu-chek Nano starter pack by printing out a coupon online and having a prescription for the meter. https://www.accu-chek.com/microsites/nano/offer.html?source=microsite Inside the box is a savings card that will give you a discount on the test strips. All you need is a prescription for the strips and the card at the pharmacy and you can get $20 off each pack of 50, $40 off each pack of 100 if you don't have insurance. https://www.accu-chek.com/connect/ Even with that, the strips are still quite pricey. I'm not planning on checking his blood sugar more than a few times a week max, hopefully very rarely once we've got him on a stable regimen. He's got enough poking to deal with and the last thing I need is to stress him into even higher blood sugars and asthma attacks.
My questions for you:
1. ReliOn users with Accu-cheks, have you compared your meters simultaneously? Have you found them to be comparable?
2. Have the Accu-chek test strips gone up in price in recent years? Just curious...seems like people were saying they were more like $1 a strip and they're up from that unless you buy them online now.
3. Anyone have any other thoughts to share, etc on this topic?
Thanks!
I know there are a lot of posts out there about which meters are reliable for kitties and pros/cons for each. My kitty just went in for his first curve today and I was in shock by how off my meter was. On the advice of my diabetic boyfriend, I bought the CVS True2go meter. He said this one had good reviews and was inexpensive. I'd checked 007's blood sugar 4 times in the past week and his values ranged 160-186. It just didn't make sense. His blood sugar from diagnosis at the lab had been 416 one of those same days.
Today I compared our vet Accu-chek Aviva to mine side by side, same blood drop. The Aviva was 316 and the True2go was 157. On me, the Aviva was 98 and True2go was 92. I suspected it was inaccurate - something was not making sense - but how inaccurate it was shocked me. Since I work at a vet, I did his urinalysis myself so I also knew how much glucose he was spilling in his urine.
I have looked at everyone's recommendations and it looks like a lot of people have ReliOn meters and strips because they are very cost-effective. I've also gotten the recommendation from my vet to purchase an Accu-chek meter. I jumped the gun and bought one at Wal-mart tonight for $25, opened it up and the 2 bottles of test strips had been swiped from the starter pack. So I got online to look at pricing and found that you can get a FREE Accu-chek Nano starter pack by printing out a coupon online and having a prescription for the meter. https://www.accu-chek.com/microsites/nano/offer.html?source=microsite Inside the box is a savings card that will give you a discount on the test strips. All you need is a prescription for the strips and the card at the pharmacy and you can get $20 off each pack of 50, $40 off each pack of 100 if you don't have insurance. https://www.accu-chek.com/connect/ Even with that, the strips are still quite pricey. I'm not planning on checking his blood sugar more than a few times a week max, hopefully very rarely once we've got him on a stable regimen. He's got enough poking to deal with and the last thing I need is to stress him into even higher blood sugars and asthma attacks.
My questions for you:
1. ReliOn users with Accu-cheks, have you compared your meters simultaneously? Have you found them to be comparable?
2. Have the Accu-chek test strips gone up in price in recent years? Just curious...seems like people were saying they were more like $1 a strip and they're up from that unless you buy them online now.
3. Anyone have any other thoughts to share, etc on this topic?
Thanks!