What do you already know about glucose monitoring? Do you want to measure glycated hemoglobin (hemoglobin A1c) or glucose per se? Do you plan on sampling the blood? Have you checked on the various devices that are already available?
All glocometer devices in the consumer area extract a blood sample from the persons vein.
The same is permitted to react /process on a test chemical paper which changes the optical sensitivity .
This reaction is time based and precipitation goes asymptotically .
Since the process is very rough /human errors are abundant ,results are varying .
I was planning for a noninvasive glucometer for measurement of haemoglobin A1C .
We probably disagree on the accuracy of methods used for home blood glucose measurements. The studies I have seen show it to be quite accurate over the range of values needed for management of diabetes. The biggest variable is probably the patient's psychology. There are some very interesting studies on compliance that show patients with diabetes, particularly those with Type I, play games with the glucose results and their insulin doses.
there are many glucose meters today and accuracy varies my wife is a diabetic for 35 years and she has had them all. Today she uses the medtronic pump and the dexcom continuous glucose meter and a accu check meter they never have the same reading.this is a problem.But this leads me to my Idea i have been working on.I would like to have a device the reads the signal from the dexcom transmitter and sends it to a smart phone and the smart phone desyphers the glucose reading .Then if it is low the smart phone sends a text or email or calls someone to let them know that persons sugar is low .This will prevent finding the diabetic on the floor after they go low