#continuousglucosemonitor

2026-02-06

Eversense 365: the first two weeks Last week I published my experience with the Eversense 365, an implantable CGM (continuous glucose monitor) that replaced my Dexcom G7. #Reviews #Diabetes #Eversense365 #t1d #Lore #dexcomg7 #continuousglucosemonitor gardinerbryant.com/eversense-36...

Eversense 365: the first two w...

2026-02-05

Eversense 365: the first two weeks

Last week I published my experience with the Eversense 365, an implantable CGM (continuous glucose monitor) that replaced my Dexcom G7....

#Reviews #Diabetes #Eversense365 #t1d #dexcomg7 #continuousglucosemonitor

gardinerbryant.com/eversense-3

2026-01-25

Good Riddance Dexcom G7. Hello Eversense 365!

I'm a Type 1 Diabetic and I was sick of the wasteful Dexcom G7 sensor. Here's my journey towards getting a better, much longer-lived continuous glucose monitor (or CGM for short).

#Diabetes #continuousglucosemonitor #medical #surgery #t1d

gardinerbryant.com/first-72-ho

2026-01-25

Good Riddance Dexcom G7. Hello Eversense 365! I'm a Type 1 Diabetic and I was sick of the wasteful Dexcom G7 sensor. Here's my journey towards getting a better, much longer-lived glucose monitor... #Diabetes #continuousglucosemonitor #medical #docker #surgery gardinerbryant.com/first-72-hou...

Good Riddance Dexcom G7. Hello...

Owen Jonesowen_author
2025-11-24

💡 Did you know CGMs can track your blood sugar in real-time? Stay on top of your health with modern tech! ⏱️📊

🔗 meganpublishingservices.com/mo

valkyriexi at KillBaitvalkyriexi@killbait.com
2025-10-10

Exploring the Trend of Non-Diabetics Using Continuous Glucose Monitors

Continuous glucose monitors (CGMs), originally designed for diabetes management, are gaining popularity among non-diabetics due to wellness trends promoted by influencers and companies like Levels and Stelo. The author, Erica Schwiegershausen, tests a Stelo CGM paired with the Levels app, which prov... [More info]

marc hallPaulHall
2025-07-17

Discover how over-the-counter CGM devices can revolutionize your blood sugar monitoring without prescriptions. Complete guide to affordable glucose tracking technology that's changing diabetes management forever. 📊💡

healthybloodsugarlevels.online

Over-the-Counter CGM Revolution
Your complete guide to prescription-free continuous glucose monitoring. Monitor, analyze, and optimize your blood sugar levels with cutting-edge technology.
2025-05-30

Just ordered myself an over-the-counter continuous glucose monitor. It's not covered by insurance because I'm not diabetic. I feel lucky I can spend $90 for a month of a cool tool.

I'm optimistic this will help me identify which foods affect my glucose, and that seeing numbers change near real-time will help me in ways that just looking up a food's glycemic index wouldn't.
#continuousglucosemonitor #insulinresistance #pcos

2025-04-14

The #ContinuousGlucoseMonitor failed after just a couple of days. So we're back to finger sticking. And feeling like I'm in the dark on where she is, blood-sugar-wise.

This Account Kills Fascistsviolenteastcoastcity
2024-09-28

I've removed my . It stopped connecting to my phone. Worse, it doesn't actually save the 24 hours of data it did manage to collect. This is an absolutely useless tool.

2024-03-28

Comparing Dexcom’s G7 and One+. Is there much difference?
As many people will have seen, Dexcom have been expanding their product line based on the G7 hardware. The replacement for their more budget device, the One, is the One+, and they're using the same hardware for the Stelo, the first US over the counter
diabettech.com/cgm/comparing-d
#CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitoring #CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitor #Dexcom #DexcomG7 #DexcomOne

2024-03-27

Regarding funding for #continuousglucosemonitor , this is the latest from a friend whose kid is effected:

(Great communication from the Ministry, huh? 😡) #nzpol

Ffs just to further clarify because I've had a diabetic advocate for me - if you get your CGMs through carer support Whaikaha they won't be covered. If you get your CGMs through carer support te Whatu Ora they will be covered. I have no idea how you know which stream you're under but my assumption is if your claim for a CGM is turned down you need to apply for the Te Whatu Ora carer support funding stream, get a new needs assessment, and send claims to the same place but they'll fall under Te Whatu Ora

Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM) wearers - How often do you reach 100% ? #diabetes #cgm #continuousglucosemonitor #type1diabetes #G7 #dexcom

2023-09-02

is anyone using a #ContinuousGlucoseMonitor for #QuantifiedSelf / general #health #monitoring purposes? If so, what are you using?

Also, curious if anyone is using #Veri? Their plan seems by far the lowest in cost but what about the quality?

Also if you have #diabetes and are using a #CGM I'd be interested to hear about your experiences with it as well. 🙂

#question #medical

2022-03-22

The New-Phone Blues: A Reminder That Hackers Shouldn’t Settle

For all the convenience and indispensability of having access to the sum total of human knowledge in the palm of your hand, the actual process of acquiring and configuring a smartphone can be an incredibly frustrating experience. Standing in those endless queues at the cell phone store, jumping through the administrative hoops, and staring in sticker shock at device that's going to end its life dunked in a toilet, contribute to the frustration.

But for my money, the real trouble starts once you get past all that stuff and start trying to set up the new phone just right. Sure, most phone manufacturers make it fairly easy to clone your old phone onto the new one, but there are always hiccups. And for something that gets as tightly integrated into the workflows of your daily life as cell phones do, that can be a real bummer. Especially when you find out that your shiny new phone can't do something you absolutely depend on.

The Problem

A case in point is my experience just this week, when I finally admitted that I needed a "real" cell phone plan, instead of the pay-as-you-go phones my wife and I have been carrying for the better part of a decade. We got what seemed like a hot screaming deal -- brand new Pixel 6 phones for free, with a plan that would only cost $10 a month more than what we were currently paying. So we signed on the line and waited for our phones to ship. It was pretty painless, actually.

That should have been my first inkling of things to come. The Pixels did a pretty good job of porting all our apps over from the old phones. Getting things set up just so, with the right ring tones and screen settings, was tedious but straightforward. Where things started to fall apart, though, was with one special, critical app -- the one we use to monitor our diabetic daughter's blood glucose level.

This is the data that I need access to on the new phone.

I have written quite a bit about diabetes before, and about how continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has been both a godsend and a curse for us as the parents of a child with Type 1 diabetes. But that app, which links us to a cloud service that her CGM system uploads data to, is absolutely essential for us. Our daughter sleeps like a rock; literally nothing wakes her, certainly not the beeping of her CGM when her blood sugar goes dangerously low in the middle of the night. That means we have to have the CGM app running on our phones, so we can get the notification that she's in trouble and wake her up to give her a snack before severe and potentially deadly hypoglycemia sets in.

And what would you know, the CGM app wouldn't work on the new Pixels. We did a little digging and found that the vendor has only certified the app as compatible with a very small number of phones, which doesn't include the Pixel 6. Curiously, neither of our old phones are on the list either, but it worked on both. That's why I wasn't too concerned about the Pixels -- if it runs on my wife's ancient Moto G4, it should run on the latest and greatest, right? Wrong.

With an afternoon wasted on the phone with tech support from both the CGM vendor and the phone carrier under my belt, I sat down to dinner with my wife, feeling defeated. We dejectedly considered the possibility that we'd have to roll back the changes to our phone plan, when I had the thought: Wait a minute! You 're supposed to be a hacker. So, get hacking!

The Hack

What I needed was a way to get alerted on the new phone when the CGM app on the old phone sounded an alarm. I realized that my old phone, where the CGM app is running fine right now, would be the centerpiece of my hack. The other asset on my old phone was MacroDroid, a scripting tool that I used to make sure that I wake up if my daughter's alarms go off more than five times in the middle of the night by sounding a super obnoxious alarm -- deep sleeping runs in the family.

Unfortunately, neither of the old phones had a SIM anymore, so sending a text to the new phones via SMS or MMS was off the table. I played around with sending an email, but that never worked very well. Then I stumbled upon ClickSend, a service that specializes in sending bulk SMS messages for marketing purposes -- you know, text spam. But, they have an API that lets me compose an HTTP GET request to send a short text to both our phones. And luckily, MacroDroid supports GETs as one of the actions it can perform.

So, with a morning's hacking, I came up with a workaround that's good enough for now. If my daughter's CGM senses a low blood glucose event, the app on my old phone sets a notification that MacroDroid recognizes as a trigger. It then sends a GET request to ClickSend, which instantly posts a text to both our new phones. All I have to do is leave my old phone powered up on my desk, and it's almost as good as having the native app working on the Pixel.

Next Steps and Lessons Learned

It works! My daughter was out for the day, and the old phone (right) sent an SMS to the new phone when her blood glucose dropped below the limit.

Is it perfect? Far from it. I liked the convenience of having the full CGM app on my phone, and being able to check her number whenever I wanted to. It's also important to see her chart, to make a judgment call about how to treat her -- there's a big difference between holding steady at 80 mg/dL and 55 mg/dL and falling fast. Not having instant access to that information will take some getting used to.

But my biggest problem with this workaround is that it relies on a long string of dependencies -- my old phone working, my WiFi and ISP staying online, no service interruptions in the CGM vendor's cloud app, and ClickSend being up and running. That's a lot of things that can break. I'd really like to cut out all those middlemen and build a widget that directly receives the RF signals from my daughter's CGM and sounds some local alarms if she goes low. I imagine a bedside box that can flash the room lights or activate a bed shaker -- or, you know, pelt her with Nerf darts. There's got to be some kind of upside to diabetes.

Until I can get the time to build something like that, this hack will have to do. Is it an epic hack for the ages? Not at all. What it is is a quick hack that I was able to cobble together with what I had on hand to solve a specific hardware problem now. In my book, that's a win.

But I think the biggest lesson here is that it's easy to forget exactly who you are sometimes. I let myself get beaten up by the process, and got to a point where I wasn't able to see that I had a way around the problem. At the end of the day, hacking is about optimism -- it's about not accepting what the system dishes out and finding another way to a solution. And in times like these, we need all the optimism we can get.

#medicalhacks #rants #app #cgm #clicksend #compatibility #continuousglucosemonitor #diabetes #macrodroid #pixel6 #smartphone #sms

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