LondonAndy;n886174 said:
Like ForeverThankful, I do a self-test at the clinic and they do a blood draw, and then they email me later with the results. Sometimes the comparison is with their own CoaguChek machine - the policy seems to change each time I go!...
That's not a meter calibration. That's a comparison of results or a comparison of analytical methodology. A comparison of results by two different meters has nothing to do with the device calibration of one method. It's not even a calibration check. If they don't agree, you have no reason to blame the meter calibration. If they don't agree within a tolerance set by historical data, then it's time to investigate. Once the cause is found, then you blame the cause. To complicate it more, don't forget, the meter's accuracy and precision capabilities changes over the meter's operating range.
IIRC, the "reference" for INR meter measurements is one or two laboratory methods, not another meter. They may have you do that comparison to make sure you are using the meter correctly, not to check the meter. The biggest error (for me) with the INR home testing machine is operator error
and I'm a technical person, nowhere near 90 and can see pretty good. Even if for the comparison they take blood for testing, the laboratory doing the testing might not be using the "reference" INR method, they could be using a meter in the lab too.
If you buy INR testing supplies on E-bay, make sure they are an authorized supplier and not some family member of a deceased relative who was on warfarin. The way the testing strips are handled is important to good test results, it's called supply chain control. In addition, when there is a recall, like what just happened, an authorized supplier will be able to find you, tell you of the problem and its risk plus replace your defective strips. The guy who is selling his dead grandma's testing supplies on Ebay won't care.