Testing Your Blood Sugar
One of the most important tests to help you manage your diabetes is the one you do yourself. This is the blood-sugar reading that you may take several times a day. Your doctor will tell you how often to test your blood sugar.
Often your home tests show blood sugar levels that are about 10% lower than levels found in lab tests. So, it's important to also have your blood sugar tested by your doctor.
Checking your blood sugar regularly helps you and your doctor see how your diabetes management plan is working. Your aim is to lower your blood sugar level and keep it there.
Use our Blood Sugar Log (PDF Format) to record your blood sugar readings throughout the day. Make extra copies so that you always have enough on hand.
There are two main ways to test your blood sugar level yourself. The finger-stick method involves pricking your finger or other part of your body with a tiny needle to draw a drop of blood. A blood glucose meter then "reads" your blood sugar level and shows the number on its screen. The non-invasive method uses a watch-like device that takes blood sugar readings through your skin.
| Finger-stick method | Non-invasive Method |
Step 1 Wash your hands with warm water and dry them well with a clean towel. You can also use an alcohol wipe to clean the finger you'll draw blood from. Step 2 After preparing your lancet and glucose meter, have a clean test strip ready. Stick the side of your fingertip with the lancet. Don't stick the tip of your finger. It will hurt more and you may not get enough blood. There are many kinds of lancets and meters. Some draw blood from your forearm. Your lancet and meter may not look like the one in this photo. Step 3 Put a large drop of blood on the correct spot on the test strip. Step 4 To get your results, follow the directions that came with your blood sugar meter. Some meters can give results in a few minutes. Step 5 Write down the results and the time you did the test (some meters will keep track of this information automatically). |
One newer blood sugar monitoring device does not draw blood. You wear it on your wrist like a watch, and it takes the reading through your skin. It uses a slight electrical current to pull fluid through the skin and into the machine where it measures the sugar level. Sugar levels in these fluids lag behind the sugar levels in your blood, so the watch can't replace your regular finger-stick test. But the watch lets you see trends in how your blood sugar changes over the course of the day. Tips:
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