Fitbit App Now Tracks Your Blood Sugar Levels (androidauthority.com) 22
Newly Google-owned Fitbit has introduced blood sugar tracking to its mobile app, helping you manage diabetes or any other health issue related to your glucose levels. Android Authority reports: The feature isn't available from Fitbit's current wearables, unfortunately. You'll have to either import or manually log blood sugar data in the Fitbit app yourself. When you do, though, you can set custom target ranges and check trends both throughout the day and over the long run. You can see if a change in diet is having an effect, for instance. Standard blood sugar tracking is free, although Fitbit Premium subscribers will "gradually" get the option to track levels over 30-day periods, with correlations and trends. Members will also get to share their levels through Health Coaching and the Wellness Report.
Foreshadowing or reaction to rumor? (Score:3)
Is this intended to foreshadow blood glucose monitoring for soon to be released Fitbits or is this a response to the rumors that this feature may be in the next generation of Apple Watches?
Re: (Score:1)
WOW, a stupid dangerous thing to do, if you care about how high you health insurance us. Those with high sugar, will have that info sold, and their health insurance premiums will skyrocket.
So how do they track your (Score:2)
Or is this super invasive tracking level 2 internal
Not first to market... (Score:4, Insightful)
Notepad and excel have both had this feature for a while. Why is this even news?
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, pretty dumb.
It's as if the Apple Watch rumors caused FitBit execs to say "we must compete or you're fired" and forced their engineering team to add a manual numeric entry as a 'feature' to compete..
FitBit execs are happy, because they can have a powerpoinnt deck that puts a check next to 'blood sugar level tracking' for both their product and Apples. Competition met!
Could not be a less noteworthy feature (Score:5, Insightful)
"You'll have to either import or manually log blood sugar data in the Fitbit app yourself." So data entry into your watch. Fun.
I don't understand the point of this unless you are super invested in your Fit Bit over and beyond your actual glucose monitoring system.
I thought that Fitbit might be going full Dexcom https://www.dexcom.com/g6/how-... [dexcom.com] with an implanted device.
Re: (Score:3)
"You'll have to either import or manually log blood sugar data in the Fitbit app yourself." So data entry into your watch. Fun.
I don't understand the point of this unless you are super invested in your Fit Bit over and beyond your actual glucose monitoring system.
Exactly. What's the point of this, and why the hell would I want to waste my time manually entering my data?
Re: (Score:1)
CeilingFitBit is watching you masturbate (Score:1)
no way (Score:2)
Why would I want to pay Google to take my personal medical information from me?
I'll bet Advertisers now have 'Diabetic' as an ad targeting category too.
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Why would I want to pay Google to take my personal medical information from me?
Google's leadership is a great believer in PT Barnum's old maxim 'There's a sucker born every minute'. And the success of companies like Facebook - or many Google properties, for that matter - provide ample supporting evidence that the maxim is true.
Re: (Score:2)
And anything they collect is not covered under HIPPA, its Google's to keep and do with as they wish.
Fitbit vs spreadsheet ? (Score:2)
I've been using a spreadsheet to do this for years. Not sure how an 'app' could make it better. I can already analyze data and make colorful graphs and share them with anyone who is interested (and they don't need a special app either). I do it on a real computer so I have the benefit of a full keyboard, a 27" viewing screen and convenient data backups to various drives that are not controlled by data marketers. Of course that prevents entering data while I'm at the beach or plowing the south forty, but the
Re: (Score:2)
Same here, going back almost nineteen years, since I was first diagnosed. And, I have a notepad type app on my phone that I can use to record readings when I'm away from home so that I don't have to check the readings on my meter to get them recorded.
Quite a big deal (Score:1)
Quite a big deal, they have added a row to their database.
Not entirely useless (Score:1)
As it stands, most of the displays for Dexcom data on Android watches are either third party (xDrip) or hacks (WearableWidgets + Nightwatch). xDrip works reasonably well if you're the T1D...if you're following the T1D (as I and my wife do ours), not so much...I use the WearableWidgets + Nightwatch hack, which stops working every so often.
If I can bridge Dexcom's Share API to FitBit's data so "manual" becomes a script that pulls data from Dexcom Share and pushes it to FitBit, and they have apps that support
I see (Score:2)
"You'll have to either import or manually log blood sugar data in the Fitbit app yourself."
So the App tries to emulate a piece of paper and a pen, revolutionary.
Fitbit has introduced x tracking to its.... (Score:1)
research topic (Score:1)