Alexandria, VA
July 31, 2013
Contact
Christine Feheley
cfeheley@diabetes.org
703-253-4374
The evolution of portable glucose meters and test strips over the past few decades has revolutionized diabetes management. By being able to test their blood glucose as frequently as needed, patients have been able to simultaneously improve their diabetes self-management and gain greater freedom in their daily schedules for meals and physical activity.
The availability of accurate blood glucose meters and test strips is critical to the success of diabetes self-management. Diabetes test strips must be manufactured to exacting standards, and they must be shipped and handled with care to assure that they remain capable of performing at their expected level of accuracy. Faulty or inaccurate equipment can not only lead to just poor diabetes self-management but to an acute medical crisis if a patient makes incorrect treatment decisions based on faulty data. A patient who administers additional insulin, based on a faulty test strip reading that indicates that their blood glucose level is high when it is actually low, runs the risk of acute hypoglycemia, which can lead to an impaired cognitive state, coma and even death if left untreated.
The American Diabetes Association strongly endorses the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) oversight of test strip manufacturers, sales and distribution to safeguard the quality and accuracy of the tools involved in diabetes self-management. The Association applauds the FDA’s requirements that all test strips meet existing FDA standards for medical devices, since those standards are designed specifically to require the greatest accuracy in readings when an error would place a patient’s health and life in danger. It is critical that FDA oversight extend beyond the initial pre-marketing approval to continual monitoring of the post-marketing product to assure that accuracy remains within established standards.
The American Diabetes Association is leading the fight to Stop Diabetes and its deadly consequences and fighting for those affected by diabetes. The Association funds research to prevent, cure and manage diabetes; delivers services to hundreds of communities; provides objective and credible information; and gives voice to those denied their rights because of diabetes. Founded in 1940, our mission is to prevent and cure diabetes and to improve the lives of all people affected by diabetes. For more information please call the American Diabetes Association at 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383) or visit www.diabetes.org. Information from both these sources is available in English and Spanish.