The FDA has approved San Diego, California-based Dexcom for a Bluetooth-enabled continuous glucose monitor (CGM), called the G5 Mobile CGM system. Correction: A previous version of this article ...
FDA classifies this as a Class I recall, which means using the device could result in adverse health effects or death. Dexcom Inc., has recalled its G4 Platinum and G5 Mobile continuous glucose ...
Dexcom, maker of continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) this week announced a voluntary recall of all lots and models of its G4 Platinum and G5 Mobile receivers. The audio alert on some of the receivers ...
SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dexcom, Inc. (NASDAQ:DXCM), the leader in continuous glucose monitoring for people with diabetes, announced today the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is ...
Approval for the technology, which integrates with a smartphone, came sooner than company officials expected. A fully mobile continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) system, which features wireless ...
Next month the FDA is hosting a public advisory committee meeting to discuss a change to the intended use of Dexcom's G5 Mobile Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (CGM) device that would allow the ...
It’s a pretty good day for San Diego-based Dexcom. The company announced that it won CE Mark approval for its G5 continuous glucose monitor in the European Union. This means the device will be ...
Continuous glucose monitor company Dexcom has hit a stumbling block. Some of its devices, including the G5 receiver for a system that just launched last fall, are not providing the audio alarms and ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the first continuous glucose monitoring system sends glucose ...
Medicare's lack of reimbursement for the Dexcom G5's smartphone app is casting a shadow over the long-awaited and much-welcomed January 2017 announcement that the continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) ...
Keeping tabs on a body's glucose levels is a way of life for diabetics — a ritual performed several times a day, often before or after meals. It's an essential chore, but it often requires special ...