Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Diabetes / Endocrine Nursing /

Proper use of Glucometer



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 385,894 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Aug 30, 2008 08:26 AM

Proper use of Glucometer


Does it really matter if you turn the glucometer on before the client does a fingerstick or not. Anyone know of any links that give you the correct use of a glucometer?


Share: Submit Thread to Facebook Submit Thread to Twitter Submit Thread to Technorati Submit Thread to Google Submit Thread to Reddit

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
4 Comments
No. 1
from nightmare
Old Aug 30, 2008, 09:01 AM

Default Re: Proper use of Glucometer
Most meters I have used have instructions with them.Usually you activate them by putting the strip in.They then give you a code to check and then show a 'place blood here' symbol of some sort.
Top
 
No. 2
from blinks14
Old Aug 30, 2008, 09:15 AM

Default Re: Proper use of Glucometer
The glucometers we use at my facility require you to turn them on before you stick the patient. They have a scanning capability that you must scan the operator's ID, the strips you are going to be using and the patient's ID bracelet before you put the strip in and add the blood. But all glucometers are different so you may find different answers.
Top
 
No. 3
Old Sep 02, 2008, 04:18 PM

Default Re: Proper use of Glucometer
You need to review the instructions for the glucometer in use to get the best answer. My personal one requires the strip to be inserted to be "on" and it will go "off" if no sample is given within 60 seconds. The hospital one we use goes "off" in 2 minutes, not one.
Top
 
No. 4
Old Sep 09, 2008, 09:14 AM
Updated Sep 09, 2008 at 09:15 AM by country mom

Default Re: Proper use of Glucometer
Always consult the meter's user manual. Typically, you will want to turn the machine on before lancing the finger. It's a little hard to manipulate a strip and/or meter buttons without disturbing the blood sample. If the little drop gets smeared, then the strip might not want to "suck it up". I teach my patients to turn the machine on, put the strip in, etc, then lance the finger. Depending on the meter, it will give you about 60 seconds to apply the sample.
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
454 members
4,114 guests
4,568

5

Hospital bill stuns slain student’s parents: $ 30,000 for 5...

17

Doctors-in-short-supply-responsibilities-for-nurses-may-expa...

8

Less regular sleep for ICU nurses may lead to errors

16

Nurse sends unused medical supplies to needy nations

24

Premature Births Are Fueling Higher Rates of Infant...

6

MRSA Strain Linked to High Death Rates

26

RI hospital fined $150,000 in 5th wrong-site surgery since...

64

Nursing: One of the 6 Thriving Jobs that are Here to Stay???

90

Dad Fights Hospital to Keep Baby on Life Support

12

A nurse can dream...about awesome nursing



7

Why am I doing this, anyway?

0

Nurse Heal Thyself

7

My Papa, why I am the nurse I am today.

15

I made it through

11

An angel's gaze

13

A Sister Never Forgets

16

Ruby's Marbles

29

What Do Operating Room Nurses Do?

14

My Little Old Jedi

17

I love this job......

23

"I hear voices"

17

Preventing FRUTI (Foley Related Urinary Tract Infection) in...

23

Error and Attitude

10

It's Just a Shower

6

Searching for the Purpose





Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: