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Continuous Glucose Monitoring: Is It Worth It for You?
Technology · 9 min read

Continuous Glucose Monitoring: Is It Worth It for You?

CGMs were once only for type 1 diabetes. Now even non-diabetics use them for nutrition. Here's the honest cost-benefit analysis.

The Short Answer

If you have type 2 diabetes and your A1C is above 7%, yes — one 14-day CGM session per quarter almost always pays for itself in better decisions and lower A1C. If you're prediabetic or a biohacker curious about your glucose, a one-time 14-day experiment is genuinely eye-opening. If you're metabolically healthy with no family history and no symptoms, it's probably overkill unless you enjoy data.

What a CGM Actually Shows

A CGM is a small sensor (about the size of a coin) that sticks to your upper arm and reads interstitial glucose every 1–5 minutes for 10–14 days. Brands include Abbott FreeStyle Libre, Dexcom G7, and in India the BeatO CGM and Sugar.Fit sensor.

You get: a continuous line graph of your glucose instead of 4 finger-prick snapshots. Suddenly visible patterns:

Pricing Reality in India (2026)

In the US, Abbott Lingo and Dexcom Stelo are now sold over the counter for $49–89 per 14-day sensor — no prescription needed.

Who Gets the Biggest Return

1. Type 2 diabetics on oral medications (highest ROI)

Clinical studies (Cell Metabolism, 2023) show A1C drops of 0.5–1.1% within 3 months of starting intermittent CGM use. At 1% reduction, that's a 21% reduction in diabetes-related mortality risk. No pill can match this ROI.

2. Prediabetics

A 14-day CGM experiment reveals whether your glucose is mostly well-controlled with occasional spikes (behavioral fix) or chronically elevated baseline (needs medical intervention). Most prediabetics don't know which category they're in.

3. People on GLP-1 drugs (Ozempic, Mounjaro, Wegovy)

GLP-1s lower glucose variably. CGM shows whether dose is right.

4. Athletes optimising performance

Elite endurance athletes now use CGMs to dial in fueling strategy. Reactive hypoglycaemia during long rides is a top-3 DNF cause and is invisible without CGM.

5. Biohackers and the 'worried well'

Honest take: a 14-day trial teaches you a lot about your body. Continuous year-round CGM use for a healthy non-diabetic is overkill and sometimes anxiety-inducing.

The Four Insights Almost Every First-Time User Gets

  1. Carbs are not the only trigger — stress, poor sleep, and even black coffee can spike glucose.
  2. Post-meal walks are magic — 10 minutes after eating, your curve flattens visibly.
  3. Alcohol tanks overnight glucose — then spikes it during morning meals. Most people have never seen this.
  4. The 'dessert with a meal' trick works — glucose rises less than dessert eaten alone because fat/protein slow absorption.

What CGMs Don't Show

A CGM tells you what's happening. It doesn't tell you why. That's why we pair CGM data with quarterly 70+ parameter blood panels in our Diabetes Programme.

The Time-In-Range Metric

CGMs introduced a new primary metric: Time in Range (TIR) — the percentage of time your glucose stayed between 70–180 mg/dL. Aim for >70% TIR. Research shows TIR predicts complications as well as A1C does, but is more actionable because you see when you fell out of range.

Common First-Week Mistakes

Our Recommendation

Do one 14-day CGM trial. Log every meal using the JForH Meal Scanner. At the end of 2 weeks, you'll have identified the 3–5 foods that spike YOU (not averages), the best time of day for your workouts, and whether your glucose is a behavioral problem or a medical one. That's typically enough signal to change course. If you're type 2, repeat quarterly. If you're prediabetic, annually.

Ready to take control of your glucose?

Scan your next meal free with our AI Meal Scanner, or start the 365-day Diabetes Programme.

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