Sign in

or Register now

MyDiabetesCentral.com

See all of our health sites at www.HealthCentral.com
Friday, July, 25, 2008

The Maxima Meter

by  David Mendosa
Sunday, March 30, 2008
David Mendosa
David Mendosa
Close
Medical journalist living with diabetes

After earning a B.A. with honors from the University of California,...

David Mendosa

Recent Posts:
View All
If diabetes has an up side, one good thing about the huge number of people who have it is that we make an attractive market for people who want to sell to us. Nowhere is this more clear than in the many blood glucose meters that companies offer us.

The choices are overwhelming. My meters page lists and links several dozen blood glucose meters that 34 companies would like us to use.

Because of all this competition for our dollars, we don't need a lot of money to buy a descent meter. In fact, more and more meter manufacturers give away their meters.

This "freebie marketing" gives away a sellable item for nothing to generate a continual market for another, generally disposable, item. A guy named King Gillette pioneered this approach to get us to buy his razor blades.

You can get almost every blood glucose meter for nothing, if you know where to look or who to ask. The newest meter is a case in point.

US Diagnostics in New York City just introduced its Maxima Blood Glucose Monitoring System with a list price of $9.95 for the meter kit, including the meter and the control solution. But you can get it free from at least one retailer when you buy two boxes of 50 test strips for $16.99 per box. That's 34 cents each.


The New Maxima Meter
Many manufacturers would love to give you their meters so you can buy their overpriced test strips, some of which sell for as much as a dollar per strip. About four years ago when I wrote about "Stripping Down the Cost of Testing" for Diabetes Health magazine, the least expensive of the 14 meter manufacturers at that time was US Diagnosics, which offered strips for its earlier generation "EasyGluco" meter for 36 cents each.

Don't count on getting all the bells and whistles with basic meters like those that US Diagnosics offers. You don't get any software to automatically upload your blood glucose readings to your computer. And you still have to code the device, meaning that you still have to match the code number on the vial to a code you enter into the meter.

But all that you do get with a Maxima meter shows how far meters have come since Tom Clemens filed a patent application for the first one, the Ames Reflectance Meter, in April 1968. That meter needed a 10 microliter drop of blood and took a minute to show the test result. Perhaps even more important, it cost at least $495 (the first person to buy one remembers that it cost him $650) -- the equivalent of more than $2,750 in today's money.

The Maxima meter not only has a much better price but also much better basic statistics. It takes only a 0.5 microliter drop of blood. It returns the test result in 5 seconds.

It also seems to be pretty accurate in my comparison tests. If you have read my articles about meters for the last few years, you know how much the lack of accuracy standards has troubled me.

But US Diagnostics does seem to care about accuracy too. "Maxima Meter gives maximum accuracy," Jennifer Kupar, the company's director of operations, tells me.

Ask a Question

Get answers from our experts and community members.

Answer a Question

Diabetes II, back problems and exercise

Answer This View all questions >
Healthcare 08