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theendisney4 | 1 year ago

If it fits in a watch a lot of nondiabetics will also buy it. It can be much cheaper that way.

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adaml_623|1 year ago

I think this is a really important point. Making it a feature in millions of watches will drive the cost of implementation down

lukan|1 year ago

Why would I as a nondiabetic buy it? Out of general curiosity for my blood sugar levels?

crazygringo|1 year ago

Not general curiosity -- but for healthier eating.

There's a theory that says you basically won't ever gain weight if you prevent your blood sugar from going above a certain level. So it's an objective way of knowing how much to eat and when.

Also, to warn when blood sugar is too low. Some people (myself included) often get so into work (or whatever) that we forget to eat, with adverse consequences. An alert is very helpful.

doxick|1 year ago

My garmin watch measures blood oxygen, heart-rare, breathing patterns, sleep patterns, stress-levels, etc

Usefull? It is if you use it. I do triathlons and knowing exactly where my blood-sugar level is at would allow me to focus better on the type of nutrition and the impact of it while working out. It would also tell me if i was a bit down before a race, so i can take some food.

Basically: this is a game-changer for amateur athletes, which would create a tremendous market for it. People i know already use the patches to measure as well, or lactate measurements, ketone measurements, etc. and that's just at the casual amateur level.

Another application that springs to mind is knowing when to eat instead of just having lunch and sugar-crashing 2 hours later in the office.

mzhaase|1 year ago

Would be a real game changer for endurance sports. There is "bonking" - depletion of muscle glycogen. When that happens your race is over. Sometimes it happens even to high level athletes what feels like out of the blue. If you knew ahead of time your blood sugar is getting low you could prevent it.

promiseofbeans|1 year ago

Because it's built-in as an extra feature to a watch that you were already gonna buy. Garmin watches can measure blood oxygen, but not many people use the feature because it drains the battery quickly. Samsung watches can do a single lead EKGs. Does that sell you the watch? Probably not. Is it yet another thing a company can add to the spec sheet and use to justify a price increase? Yes.

e40|1 year ago

Because many of us have high blood sugar but are not diabetic and knowing the impact of diet on blood sugar would be a boon to controlling the issue.

DoctorOetker|1 year ago

I believe GP assumes the reader of their comment to understand that one of the types of diabetes is acquired during ones lifetime, by over-consumption of certain types of nutrition.

Preventing non-hereditary diabetes could be much cheaper from a societal perspective.

stabbles|1 year ago

Endurance athletes already monitor this to figure out how to fuel best.

hombre_fatal|1 year ago

To fuel their “low carb” low carb eating disorder.