| Coding is a touchy issue. The reason is because of inacuracies in strip making. If all strips were made 100% the same there would be no need for coding.
When the manufacturer produces a batch of strips, they remove some to do quality control and coding tests on. The tests are using a precise solution that will measure the same with that batch each time. That measurement will be off a set amount from what the strip should truely read. That is then marked on the strip as that code for that batch.
Basically, it's like giving the numbers 1-20 to a pH scale and then testing different kinds of milk to find out which is which level.
The problem is, I think the differences in each coding are so little that the 20% error rate for a meter can make more of a difference. I don't really know on that though. I just always make sure I check my code on a new bottle and generally when I get them from the insurance I get the same code for a year or so, meaning I don't have to change that often.
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