[Diabetes-Talk] Need information about accessible glucometers

debbiewunder at charter.net debbiewunder at charter.net
Sat Jan 14 18:46:28 UTC 2023


Hi, I would v very much like to talk with you to see if I can be of any help. You can reach me at 573 268 6989.

Warmly,
Debbie, president  of DAN

-----Original Message-----
From: Diabetes-Talk <diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Sheila via Diabetes-Talk
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2023 6:07 PM
To: Andre Zelvin via Diabetes-Talk <diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Sheila <sheila.leigland at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Diabetes-Talk] Need information about accessible glucometers

hi, I  have the prodedgy voice but I also have the clever choice monitor which I bought on amazon. I have better luck with clever choice my prodedgy voice often tells me that I don't have enough blood on the strip which I find annoying and therefore frustrating.

On 1/11/2023 1:52 PM, Andre Zelvin via Diabetes-Talk wrote:
> Hi all,
> I'm pre-diabetic. I joined this list thinking I wanted to know what accessible equipment people are using so that I'll know what my options are if I need to know in the future. Well, It's very likely as later onset diabetes including needing insulin, is in my family. I could have guessed I wouldn't retain anything I read here if it wasn't immediately applicable.
>
> I wasn't able to get my blood sugar under control following my doctor's recommendation which was just to cut out sugar and eat only whole grains. That was pretty much how I was eating already, eating very little sugar and mostly whole grain products. So,  that did nothing. she then said to eat low carb and I started to do that with very little guidance and I ended up with something close to the Keto diet but without following that diet's guidance on ratios. So, that pretty much worked. I even lost a chunk of weight which wasn't my goal but made the doctor happy.
> The problem is it's costly to eat this way and I don't have the money for it. Since I practically went from all to almost nothing as far as carbs go, we came up with the idea I could add some back in, but test my blood sugar along the way so I could get more immediate feedback than waiting for my next appointment.
> so, here I am needing to know. Is there a write-up of what the current options are for a blind person for testing blood glucose? If not can someone give me a run-down? I have an iPhone which I. know is rellevant, and am on Medicare, but don't have prescription coverage, but do have a sliding scale medical center where I get anything that comes from their pharmacy at low cost. So, having no clue what I'm looking at, I know there's the machinery and then there's the strips or whatever supplies are needed, and my goal is to minimize expense, not convenience at this point, although if it becomes a long term thing, convenience will then be an issue. And if there's anything else anyone  thinks I should know, please share. Talk to me expecting that I know nothing.
> Thanks for any help,
> Andre
>    
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