This patient support community is for questions related to juvenile diabetes including celiac disease, depression, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia / diabetic keto-acidosis, hypoglycemia, islet cell transplantation, nutritional issues, parenting a diabetic child, pregnancy, pump therapy, school issues, and teens with diabetes.
Sometimes the readings are very close, sometimes way, way off. There doesn't seem to be a pattern.
And no consistency in the differences. So we are forced to just use ours, which she hates b/c of the larger and more painful lancet.
I tried bringing my husbands meter in, and comparing results from me vs the hospital meter. Once, almost exactly identical readings, and 2 minutes later...15 points off! Our meter is QC'd every 8 hours at the hospital. According to the lab and biomed, its fine.
Unfortunately then, I guess we'll have to use ours. She's on a strict sliding scale, and a blood sugar of 120 calls for a significantly different insulin dose than 100.
I see where you're coming from, though. For a well established and controlled diabetic, it isn't as crucial.