The present invention relates to blood glucose monitoring devices and, more particularly, to a blood glucose monitoring device which ensures that blood glucose test strips are used up before their expiry dates.
Conventional blood glucose test strips have unique lot numbers and parameters, respectively. A conventional blood glucose monitoring device reads their lot numbers and adjusts their parameters, whereas a user has to compare their codes for correctness; the aforesaid requirements are hardly user friendly. Furthermore, a conventional container for blood glucose test strips consists of a can body and a cap. A user puts the test strips in the can body and then closes the can body with the cap so that the closed space in the can body not only contains the test strips but also keeps them dry and thus functioning. In addition to the need to stay dry, the test strips need to be used before expiry dates in order for the blood glucose tests to be accurate. However, using up all the test strips in one's possession before an expiry date is seldom easy to a typical user who requires long-term blood glucose monitoring; it is because once a normal blood glucose test result is yielded, users' complacency is often accompanied by reluctance to take a blood glucose test daily. The aforesaid failure to use up all the test strips in one's possession before an expiry date contributes to inaccuracy in the blood glucose tests, causes a waste of test strips, and compromises the users' voluntary health management.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a blood glucose monitoring device which sends an alert or reminder message upon determination that test strips have expired or their lot numbers are rejected by a glucometer.
The blood glucose monitoring device of the present invention uses a rewritable signal component of a container to sense a glucometer and thereby determines whether the glucometer matches blood glucose test strips, thus allowing the glucometer to create a container-opened message which serves as a comparison basis of a check in the future. In brief, according to the present invention, before their use, the blood glucose test strips must sense the container and the glucometer in order to ensure normal and effective use of the blood glucose test strips. Hence, the blood glucose monitoring device of the present invention effectively overcomes drawbacks of the prior art (test strips which have expired are still in use, and test strips do not match the glucometer) and uses an alert message to preclude imprecise blood glucose level test results which might otherwise occur because the test strips have expired or because the container does not sense the glucometer before being opened and used while users are uninformed.
Referring to
A rewritable signal component 13 (shown in
The glucometer 3 comprises a casing 31, a processing module 32 disposed in the casing 31, a control panel 34, a test slot 35 for holding each one of the blood glucose test strips 3, and a signal processing component 33. The control panel 34, the test slot 35 and the signal processing component 33 are electrically connected to the processing module 32. The control panel 34 comprises a circuit board 321. Memory and a processor, both for use in accessing data, a display screen 341 and a speaker component 342 are coupled to the circuit board 321. The signal processing component 33 is disposed in the casing 31. A port 311, such as a USB interface, is disposed on one side of the casing 31, connected to an electronic apparatus 4, such as a tablet (as shown in
Referring to
If an expiry date of the blood glucose test strips 2 has passed and the blood glucose test strips 2 are still in use, the processing module 32 will send an alert message which displays text by voice or on the display screen 341 to remind the user that the blood glucose test strips 2 have expired, and the glucometer 3 will not read blood glucose levels. In brief, the blood glucose test strips 2 which have expired are no longer for use by the glucometer 3. In another preferred embodiment, if the container 1 does not sense the glucometer 3 before use, the glucometer 3 will not create the container-opened message, and in consequence the test strip information of the blood glucose test strips 2 in the container 1 cannot be created, preventing the blood glucose test strips 2 in the container 1 which has not been opened and thus confirmed from being for use by the glucometer 3 either.
To prevent the user from not using the container 1 to sense the glucometer 3 before opening the container 1 according to the present invention and thus from complaining about an imprecise test, the present invention is characterized in that the container-opened message created by the glucometer 3 sensed by the container 1 is sent by the wireless communication technology and then written to the rewritable signal component 13 of the container 1. The glucometer 3 or the container 1 sends by the wireless communication technology the comparison data, electronic signal or container-opened message to an electronic apparatus 4, such as a mobile phone (as shown in
According to the present invention, the blood glucose monitoring device 100 operates in a manner as follows: the rewritable signal component 13 of the container 1 senses the glucometer 3 to determine whether the glucometer 3 matches the blood glucose test strips 2 and enable the glucometer 3 to create the container-opened message which serves as a comparison basis of a check in the future. In brief, according to the present invention, before their use, the blood glucose test strips 2 must sense the container 1 and the glucometer 3 in order to ensure normal and effective use of the blood glucose test strips 2. Hence, the blood glucose monitoring device 100 of the present invention effectively overcomes drawbacks of the prior art (test strips which have expired are still in use, and test strips do not match the glucometer 3) and uses an alert message to preclude imprecise blood glucose level test results which might otherwise occur because the test strips have expired or because the container 1 does not sense the glucometer 3 before being opened and used while users are uninformed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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105213038 | Aug 2016 | TW | national |