Diabetes test

Knowing your blood sugar levels helps you manage your diabetes and reduces your risk of having serious  complications  – now and in the fut...

Knowing your blood sugar levels helps you manage your diabetes and reduces your risk of having serious complications – now and in the future.



You can check your blood sugar levels yourself by doing a finger-prick test, by using a flash glucose monitor or with a continuous glucose monitor (CGM). You can do this a number of times a day – helping you keep an eye on your levels as you go about your life and help you work out what to eat and how much medication to take.
But not everyone with diabetes needs to check their levels like this. You’ll need to if you take certain diabetes medication. Always talk to your healthcare team if you’re not sure whether that’s you – they’ll give you advice on whether to check them yourself and how often.
And there’s also something called an HbA1c, which measures your average blood sugar level from the previous few months. Everyone with diabetes is entitled to this check.
High blood sugar levels increase your risk of developing serious complications. However you manage your diabetes, stay in the know about your blood sugar levels.

Why check blood sugar levels?

If you take certain medication, like insulin or sulphonylureas, checking your blood sugars is a vital part of living with diabetes. It can help you work out when you need to take more medication, when you need to eat something or for when you want to get up and move around more.
Routine checks can help you know when you might be starting to go too low (called a hypo) or too high (called a hyper). It’s a way of getting to know your body and how it works. It can help you and your healthcare team spot patterns too. Do you write your results down? You might find that helpful.
But importantly, it will help you stay healthy and prevent serious diabetes complications now and in the future. By complications, we mean serious problems in places like your feet and your eyes. This happens because too much sugar in the blood damages your blood vessels, making it harder for blood to flow around your body. This can lead to very serious problems like sight loss and needing an amputation.
The higher your blood sugar levels are and the longer they’re high for, the more at risk you are.

Finger-pricking

This is how you find out what your blood sugar level is at that moment in time. It’s a snapshot.
Your healthcare team will show you how to do the test and it’s important that you’re taught how to do it properly – otherwise you could get the wrong results.
For some people, finger-prick testing isn’t a problem and it quickly becomes part of their normal routine. For others, it can be a stressful experience, and that’s totally understandable. Knowing all the facts and speaking to other people can help – contact our helpline or chat to others with diabetes on our online forum. They’ve been through it too and will understand your worries.
Watch our video and follow our simple steps on how to test your blood sugars in the right way and safely.
We have more information for you if your child has diabetes and you’re checking their blood sugar levels for them.
You’ll need these things to do the test:
  • a blood testing meter
  • a finger prick device
  • some test strips 
  • a lancet (a very short, fine needle)
  • a sharps bin, so you can throw the needles away safely.
If you’re missing one of these, speak to your healthcare team.

Blood testing meters

New meters come on the market all the time, so it can be tricky choosing the right one. It’s best to ask your healthcare team for advice on a meter that’ll suit you. 
If you have sight problems, you may not be able to use some meters so your healthcare team can suggest alternatives.
Some people can get meters on prescription. But if you choose to buy your own meter, you might not get a prescription for the test strips it uses. Chat to your healthcare team.

Test strips

Test strips usually come in batches of 50 and must work with the type of meter you’ve chosen.
But about one in four people in the UK have had a GP who’s refused to prescribe test strips. We think this is unacceptable so we’re campaigning for everyone to have access to test strips on prescription.
If this happens to you, take it up with your GP practice. If that doesn’t work, contact your local Clinical Commissioning Group (your local CCG manages the NHS Trust in your area).
If you decide to buy strips from outside the UK or online, you’ll need to check they’re adjusted to UK specifications.

Finger-prick devices and lancets

Finger-prick devices pierce the skin with a needle so that a drop of blood can be taken for testing. The needle is called a lancet.
You can adjust the device to change how far it goes into the skin. It’ll depend on the thickness of the skin. 
Lancets come in different sizes and thicknesses (or gauges). A higher-gauge lancet is thinner so is normally less painful, but it might not always give you enough blood.
You can only use a lancet once or they get blunt and are painful to use.

How to do a finger-prick test


Your healthcare team will show you how to do it the first time, but these are the key steps:
  • Wash your hands with soap and warm water. Don’t use wet wipes as the glycerine in them can affect the test result. Make sure your hands are warm so it’s easier to get blood and won’t hurt as much.
  • Take a test strip and slot it into the meter to turn it on. Some meters will have tests strips built in. 
  • Remove the cap from your finger prick device and put in a new lancet. Then put the cap back on and set the device by pulling or clicking the plunger.
  • Choose which finger to prick but avoid your thumb or index finger (finger next to your thumb). And don’t prick the middle, or too close to a nail. Place the device against the side of your finger and press the plunger. Use a different finger each time and a different area.
  • Take your meter with the test strip and hold it against the drop of blood. It’ll tell you if the test strip is filled, usually by beeping.
  • Before you look at your reading, check your finger. Use a tissue to stop bleeding, then use it to take out the lancet and throw it away in your sharps bin.
  • By this time, your meter will probably show the result. Note it down.
  • You can use the same tissue to take out the test strip and throw that away too. Taking out the strip will usually turn the meter off.

Make a note of your readings

It may sound obvious, but you must record your readings. Note them down in a diary, a notebook or in your phone calendar. Some meters have software that lets you do this. You could try a diabetes app too.
You and your healthcare team can then look back over your results to see if you need to adjust your treatment.

What’s my target range?

You’ll get different readings at different times of the day. And your ideal target range is individual to you and you’ll agree this with your healthcare team. But here’s a guide to help you get started:

If you’re a child with Type 1 diabetes

  • when you wake up and before meals: 4 to 7mmol/l
  • after meals: 5 to 9mmol/l 

If you’re an adult with Type 1 diabetes

  • when you wake up and before you’ve eaten: 5 to 7mmol/l
  • before meals at other times of the day: 4 to 7mmol/l

If you have Type 2 diabetes

  • before meals: 4 to 7mmol/l
  • two hours after meals: less than 8.5mmol/l
What does mmol/l mean?
mmol/l stands for millimoles per litre. A mole is a scientific unit often used to measure chemicals.
If you’re pregnant and have diabetes, your targets will be different. We have lots more information to help you if you’re planning to have a baby or you’re pregnant now.

Flash glucose monitors

More and more people with diabetes are choosing to use a flash glucose monitor to check their blood sugar levels. It’s a sensor you wear on your skin and you don’t have to prick your finger to use it. The main brand is called the FreeStyle Libre.
But flash glucose monitoring doesn’t measure the sugar in your blood. It measures the amount of sugar in the fluid surrounding your cells, called interstitial fluid. This causes a delay with the reading so it’s not completely accurate, so you’ll still need to do a finger prick test every now and again.
They’re a great advance in technology and it’s great news they’re now available on prescription. But we’re still fighting for this technology to be free in all areas of the UK – find out more about our Fight for Flash campaign.

HbA1c test

As well as regularly testing your own blood sugars, at least once a year your healthcare team will ask you to come in for an HbA1c test. This checks your average blood sugar levels and helps your diabetes team and you spot trends over time. 
This is one of your essential diabetes health checks and it’s really important you understand what your results mean. Even slightly high HbA1c levels can lead to serious complications with your eyes, feet, heart and kidneys. So don’t ignore it, stay in the know about your HbA1c.
We’ve got more information about the HbA1c test and what your levels mean.

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