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One Drop Blood Glucose Monitoring Kit for iPhone Launches on Apple.com

Health startup One Drop recently launched its iOS-compatible One Drop Chrome Blood Glucose Monitoring Kit on Apple.com for $99.95. Approved by the FDA and CE in Europe, the kit includes a Bluetooth-enabled blood glucose meter, a chrome lancing device, test strips, and a vegan leather carry case.

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The blood glucose meter can read results "in just five seconds," transmitting the data to the One Drop iOS app [Direct Link] that users can download on iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Apple Watch. One Drop's lancing device has custom depth settings to provide the right amount of pressure on a user-by-user basis in order to draw "a perfect drop every time." To keep up on compatible test strips, users can subscribe to One Drop Premium for a monthly $39.95 fee.

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With Apple's energetic and consistent focus on health, One Drop provides a premium product that not only meshes well with Apple's design sensibility, but aligns well with their desire to empower users to take control of their health.

Its new Chrome hardware connects to One Drop’s iOS, watchOS, and Android apps, and have full HealthKit and CareKit integration, allowing you to sync data from other health apps (e.g., CGMs, bluetooth meters, food & activity trackers) and share your data with your Care Team.

One Drop was one of four apps to launch with Apple's CareKit platform in 2016, including fertility tracker Glow Nurture, maternity app Glow Baby, and depression medication tracker Start. CareKit allows app developers to create integrated software that helps patients and doctors to better track and manage medical conditions.

On Apple.com, the One Drop Monitoring Kit is available for both store pickup and home shipping, with delivery dates listed as early as tomorrow, January 13. For more information on One Drop, check out the company's website here.

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Top Rated Comments

yanki01 Avatar
120 months ago
as a type 1 diabetic, i'm glad more and more technology is getting into diabetes. I need to look more into this product.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Iconoclysm Avatar
120 months ago
How many vegans did they have to kill to make all of those cases? Unbelievable!
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
aslater18 Avatar
120 months ago
as a type 1 diabetic, i'm glad more and more technology is getting into diabetes. I need to look more into this product.
Pretty pricey though. iHealth's Smart Glucometer is only $30 up front, offers the same functionality, and 100 strips only cost $25. For this, you're just paying for fancy chrome and unbelievably pretentious-sounding "Vegan Leather".

https://ihealthlabs.com/glucometer/wireless-smart-gluco-monitoring-system/
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
120 months ago
Personally I would rather they open up NFC to other developers so they can support CGM (Continuous Glucose Monitor) devices such as the Freestyle Libre, like Android already does.

As an iPhone user, I need to carry around a separate scanner device to scan the patch on my arm that constantly monitors my blood glucose. It's still way easier, less painful, and more informative than finger prick blood tests, but I really should be able to do it with my iPhone given Apple's focus on HealthKit. The shiny chrome design and bluetooth support of this thing can't hide that it's older tech now! :)
I could not agree more. I've been fortunate enough to use the Freestyle Libre for about 6 months now, and despite 20 years of diabetes type 1, ive never had better control. Its by far the best thing to happen to me and my diabetes, too bad Apple wont open up their NFC to allow me to control my blood glucose with my iphone. Currently i have to use a third party device, or an android phone - neither of which i really like...! Please apple please!!!
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
118 months ago
The readings ranged wildly from the get go. I contacted them and after a dozen conversations of them trying to justify why their reader accuracy was so poor they agreed to send a replacement. I waited for several weeks and the replacement never came.

Cancelling the account itself was needlessly cumbersome.

In one of my conversations with them they suggested I should do two readings every time (even though that did not help accuracy at all). I told them they should rename themselves TwoDrops instead of OneDrop.

The product itself looks good online but it's no more than chrome coated cheap plastic.

Overall this was a terrible experience. $100 later and a after lot of frustration and disappointment, I am going back to my AccuCheck Aviva which has always been accurate and never fluctuates more than a few mg, the OneDrop would fluctuate sometimes 50mg and they claimed this was normal ):-(
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Buran Avatar
120 months ago
Ordered one; I hope this will serve me well and make it easier to share data with my endocrinologist. I don't always wear my CGM, and when I don't it's hard to let them know what my manual test results were.

Glucose meters are eligible for FSA reimbursement, so this is a good use of half of the remaining funds from 2016's FSA. I'll have to decide whether to pay for the test strips via FSA as well (that's also an eligible expense) or pay out of pocket, but either way, the cost for this is about the same as what I pay now for lancets and test strips through an ongoing prescription. If it doesn't work out, I can always use my current meter.

As for lancing devices, the cost for those is trivial. It's always been the case that the test strips are the profit center. And, unfortunately, every meter uses a different type of test strip so it's impossible to buy a generic strip that works with brand-name meters. It's disgusting. At least this meter has a flat-rate monthly price for whatever number of test strips you need, and the amount you get is the amount you actually need/use. I looked at my copay history and the comparison is favorable for me.

According to the FAQ, the lancing device uses generic lancets. That's something that'll cost less than the meter I've got now, as I'm not sure that generic lancets work with its lancing device. You can get a box of generic lancets (commonly 100 per box) for a few dollars at most major pharmacies, and not everyone replaces the lancet with each test so each box can last a long time. (Not advised, but people do it). Lancets do not require a prescription to purchase.

The no-prescription-required deal here is also good. I do maintain prescriptions for the medications I use and I do easily get prescription renewals from my clinic, but not having to have one is one less hassle to remember to handle.
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Dexcom does this now, and feeds the glucose into the Health App now. Pretty cool, and now that the FDA says that we can use CGM readings for dosing, I think that this new blood checker, cool as it is, may have limited days. Dexcom is also working on a new system that only has to be calibrated once per 7 days, and rumors are that it may go up to 14 days.

Also, the Dexcom uses BT LE for the transmitters, so I can get 30 foot range between me and the phone. I haven't used the Libre, only the Dexcom 7, G4, and G5, and the Minimed Harpoon...errr... CGM from 2007.

Having said all that about CGM, finger sticks are still the 'gold standard'.
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That's the hard part for other companies, and this new one is a boon for those whose strips aren't covered. Lifescan has a death grip on insurance companies, as I've been with a few, and they seem to be in all the formularies as a cheapy prescription, and anything other brand seems to be a 'premium' brand, and visiting the local Walgreens doesn't offer much rationale to those decisions
I have a Verio meter now and I haven't been happy with its app or its sharing options. My copay is similar to yours, but the particular meter I am using right now doesn't work with generic lancets to the best of my knowledge. Keeping roughly the same monthly cost for the amount of test strips I need with better app support and better sharing is personally worth it for me.

I did once try to switch to a different brand of meter, but my insurer refused to cover it as it wasn't a OneTouch meter. That bothered me, as I think I should be free to use whatever meter I'd like to use as long as it meets FDA requirements as all such meters are required to do. Why is one meter okay but another is not?

I've also had this problem with some medications, and now I have to use one that is painful to administer instead of another that was painless because my insurer refused to cover the painless one and out of pocket it was hundreds of dollars. Both treat the same condition, are FDA approved for the same "label", and have the same effect/results. I never got a satisfactory explanation, either.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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