Diasend.

Paper blood sugar logbooks were my arch nemesis when I was a kid (and I'm fairly certain my mother wasn't a fan of them, either).  My mother and I used to slap together my logbook the night before my endocrinologist appointment, using different colored pens to make it seem like we'd been tending to this data stream for weeks. In the days before meters could be connected to computers and when "clouds" were simply indicators of precipitation, logging the numbers and seeing the trends in my blood sugars wasn't the most streamlined process in the late 80's.   When I was pregnant, the magic of the Kevin spreadsheet kept me in line best, because I was hyper-focused, but after the baby was born, maintaining a spreadsheet was much harder because I wasn't ever sitting at the same computer, meter in hand, for more than a few minutes.  As much as I love, love Kevin's spreadsheet for precision log booking, I am more consistent when I have a plug-and-play system to use. I've been fiddling around with Diasend for about two years, but haven't really dedicated myself to it until the last five or six months.  There are months when I upload once a week (my meter and my pump), and then there are months where I only log in once and dump all the data.  (And then there are months when I skip it completely.)  It wasn't until I switched to the Verio meter, and then figured out how to make my CGM data show up on the Diasend cloud, that I was going through the m...
Source: Six Until Me. - Category: Diabetes Tags: Blood Sugar Source Type: blogs