On April 1, it was my (dare I say it?) 41st birthday. Because I don't have kids and I'm at an age where I can pretty much buy whatever I want whenever I want it, I'm well beyond the whole "I want that for my birthday" phase of life because I don't really have to deny myself all that much (the one possible exception being vacation time, and that's an employer issue, not really a personal option). So when I was asked what I wanted for my birthday, I actually chose something that many people might say was kind of inappropriate for birthday gift: the Bayer Contour USB blood glucose meter. I wanted one because it looked kind of cool and had some neat features, but I did not like the price-tag (although most brands are covered by most insurance companies ... except the brand I'd like to use AgaMatrix WaveSense meters because of their accuracy, but they aren't on many insurance formularies, which I told my contact at the company ... they claim to be working on it, but it's tough to do without giving the product away to insurance companies), but wasn't willing to spend $75 for a trial device.
I certainly didn't NEED the Bayer Contour USB meter because I already have another brand I use all the time (I test around 14 times per day, so companies should be lusting after my business AND willing to give me a free meter -- even a costly one) as well as an estimated 5 different backups (those I keep in the glove compartment of my car, in my office desk drawer, a second one, a backup I carry with me in my bag, etc., etc., etc.). But I also wouldn't even think of going out and spending $75 on a glucose meter, so I figured this might be my only opportunity to try it. I must disclose that the manufacturer (Bayer) did NOT give me ANYTHING (not even an offer!) to try it (if they want to, they can locate me or leave a comment on my blog, I'd welcome some free strips to extend my trial!), so I am 100% objective and completely unbiased in my review of the product. Nothing against my peers (such as Chris who was very forthcoming about the fact that the company sent him the device at no charge) who have gotten free samples - I wouldn't mind getting one like this! But truthfully, I don't exactly make it easy for manufacturers to reach me because I don't publish my contact information (that's by design), although it CAN be done -- and has been. I generally pride myself in not having been a recipient of any "blog-ola" as it's come to be known, which I view as a plus when it comes to my objectivity in providing an objective review.
Let me begin by noting that I honestly don't believe there's anything materially different in terms of the underlying technology between the various meters & test strips from Johnson & Johnson's Lifescan/One Touch, Abbott's Freestyle, Roche's Accu-Check, or Bayer's Contour meters in terms of underlying technology. In fact, the FDA seemed to validate this assumption a while back by issuing a warning that applied to ALL electro-chemical meters (the old, color-based test strips were exempt from the warning) about over-the-counter medicines that could impact test results -- the warning was not specific to a particular brand. None of them are any more or less accurate, because they all pretty much use the same electro-chemical reagents to generate an electrical charge that results in a meter reading. All of the competition (the notable exception being AgaMatrix, which just signed a deal with drug giant Sanofi-Aventis, which could get that more-reliable technology on formularies for many insurance companies that don't presently cover AgaMatrix Wavesense testing supplies today) use very similar technology.
Nowadays, manufacturers pretty much market testing supplies largely with lame-ass gimmicks, such as unsubstantiated claims of smaller samples that's supposed to translate into less pain (since they all require the same lancet, I fail to comprehend those claims), or else faster results -- nice, but considering the average is now about 5 seconds for the major brands, I wonder when they'll get to a point when the meter GIVES me time?! The most recent gimmicks have come down to such things as petty designer colors, as if they were selling nail polish to tween-aged girls or something. But Bayer appears to have done some homework, and based on my initial trial, I think they've scored VERY well on several accounts, which I'll address just ahead in this post.
Marketing of blood glucose testing supplies today is either by aggressive sales forces who work to get the product on every single insurance company formulary (that's tough unless they negotiate big price breaks), and/or via annoying salesmen/women who pester doctors all the time, thereby detracting them from actually treating us as the patients. If they want to call on doctors, I think they should do it at a time when the doctors aren't seeing patients.
Anyway, I've been using the J&J One Touch Ultra for a while now, and although I'm not crazy about their meters (but I DO need to use some brand), there really hasn't been much to get me to switch brands. I really believe that J&J completely takes my business for granted -- I'm only loyal to the brand because of inertia, and nothing else.
Over the years, I have tried many different brands, and I'd switch from my current brand if there was something fundamentally different about the products but mostly they're just variations on the same theme. That was until this Bayer meter came along, which has built-in software, it's very compact, yet has a full-color display screen, a lighted test-strip insertion location (if needed), huge storage capacity, and it recharges from the USB port on your computer (or from a wall outlet if you're away from a PC).
I tried Abbott's Freestyle product (back in the day, I had a Freestyle Tracker that worked with my Handspring Personal Digital Assistant/PDA -- that company was later acquired by rival Palm) a number of years ago. While it was nice having my appointments, contacts, and meter all in a single device, that was really more of temporary route to today's smartphones, which are really tiny computers. With smartphones assuming that role today, and product development and new product timelines for the handset business being months, the molasses-slow FDA approval process has prevented similar types of technologies from emerging ... yet.
As I already noted, I absolutely hated Abbott's Freestyle test strips. I also think Abbott's claims about the world's smallest sample size is a complete lie. That leaves Roche's Accu-Check, which I must admit was the very first meter brand I ever used back in the mid-1980s when self-monitoring blood glucose meters were still brand new. When it comes to advertising that brand, I'm not sure the patriotism theme in their advertising really speaks to me, even if they are the only strips still made in the U.S. because Roche is actually a Swiss company. I cannot document all of the corporate ownership changes for the Accu-Check brand over the years, but I seem to recall the Accu-Check brand when I first began using it belonging to a German company named something like Boehringer Mannheim (or maybe it was Boehringer Ingelheim) at the time, not Roche, but for all I knew, that might have simply been a U.S. distribution partner.
At this point, I really just need a compelling reason to switch brands. Truthfully, the mere fact that the Bayer has Nick Jonas' endorsing the product works against them in my opinion, because I view as a tween boy-band largely merchandised by Disney's Robert Iger, yet to be proven without the Disney dollars behind him as celebrity endorsements which really don't work in medical devices. Nick Jonas talking about Bayer's "Simple Wins" campaign simply doesn't speak to me. Ironically, Bayer isn't using the Disney-created type 1 tween to promote the Contour USB. From what I can tell from Bernard Farrell's review of the Contour USB meter, the initial target audience was twenty-somethings, and I don't really think that age group is the prime audience for the Disney Channel's JONAS show either, so they abandoned the celebrity pitch for the Contour USB meter.
Smart Advertising for Contour USB
I actually think Bayer's advertising for this meter is actually quite slick -- it's suggestive (the woman in this ad's face isn't even visible!) without being as overtly sexual as, say, commercials for certain shampoo brands are (anyone seen commercials for Clairol's Herbal Essences?). I can't really say this ad is gender-neutral, as I don't know if it's going to appeal directly to women (or gay guys for that matter), but I think everyone can see an ad that's smart and creative. By comparison, most ads for testing supplies today is either offensive (pain-free?), irrelevant, stupid or some combination of all these things. My one complaint: why must meter companies ALWAYS feature non-diabetic readings in their ads? After all, someone without diabetes has no need for these devices, so let's see a reading of 363 mg/dL or 45 mg/dL in the ads for a change (catch my previous diatribe on that subject here). But you can catch the smarter commercial spots now running for Bayer's Contour USB meter here:
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Happy Birthday To Me With A Bayer Contour USB Meter
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9 comments:
Happy Birthday Scott (OK late but I hope that best wishes are something none of us get too old for)
Thanks for the write up and the review of the marketing programs. I guess if the products are essentially the same the manufacturers are left with little to sell differentiate their products. I think this meter does a great job of finding something different than the pack. When I say different I don’t mean actually accurately different because it is the same old strip. +/- 20
The form factor is great. Screen is very nice and like you point out no stupid 40 cable. I did get a lot of comments about the software in the USB meter not working with various operation systems (Mac 10.6 and Windows 7) that I didn’t try to verify.
USB is nice but I would really like to see Bluetooth to a phone. Any phone. And come to think of it I would like to use WaveSense strips in that Bluetooth set up.
All the best.
Jaa det tror jag med! Absolut!
Bayer mätaren är grymt bra asså, har den!
Happy Birthday and congrats on the new meter! I love my contour USB!
(ok, funny, my wordverification word is "rocher", but I'm not a "rocher" I'm a "bayerer"!)
Hi Scott and happy birthday. Thanks for the callout on my blog post/photo. And thank you also for the detailed and informative post.
I'm on the fence about this meter. I'm still using a WaveSmith Jazz, even though the copays are much higher for the strips. Bayer would have to convince me that their accuracy at least meets that of the WaveSmith line before I'd change.
Happy Birthday!
Thanks for the birthday greetings, everyone! Bernard, you're absolutely right, I think the WaveSense meter technology is hands down the best, but I cannot even order it from my supplier, they don't even carry it. From my perspective, Bayer's meters and technology is equal to J&J Lifescan One Touch Ultra and they deliver it in a nicer package. I am very optimistic that the Sanofi Aventis deal will get the WaveSense products to far more people, maybe even my archaic insurance company's suppliers!
Happy belated birthday Scott! Sorry I'm so late in reading and commenting (seems that is my new normal lately).
Maybe its just me, but I switched to this meter about two weeks ago and I am burning through strips. About every other time I test, I burn about 3-5 strips with not enough blood errors. And it sucks when you've ran out of fingers to lance...
Frustrating.
Hi Scott,
have you figured how to read/extract the raw data from the device?
Prahalad
Per Wavesense, I've run a side-by-
side comparison between the Jazz &
Presto (150 tests), & found no diff
erence worth mentioning, so used the
Presto until recently, when Walmart
(locally?) quit carrying the strips.
Presto blew the doors off my older
Accu-Chek (I take insulin, & hypos
became a thing of the past :)...
I called Roche to gripe about lousy
accuracy & they sent a new Aviva,
which seems to hold its own with
the Wavesense meters - Since I can
get mostly free strips from the VA
that's what I'm doing for now...
FWIW, Jack
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