Blood sugar history and reports for appointments
How to prepare readable blood sugar reports, export glucose and insulin history, and keep your records portable for appointments and personal review.
It is easy to remember one unusual blood sugar reading.
It is harder to remember two or three months of glucose history clearly.
That is where a useful blood sugar report can help. Instead of trying to explain your history from memory, you can bring a clearer record: readings, dates, glucose summaries, insulin entries, time in range, estimated A1C, and trends in one place.
Glu Sight is built for that kind of review. You can log glucose manually, bring in compatible glucose data from Apple Health, track insulin, and export your history as a readable PDF report or a CSV file you can keep and reuse.

A report gives your history a calmer shape
Daily diabetes tracking can feel noisy. One number might stand out because it was surprising, stressful, or different from what you expected.
A report helps pull the view back.
With Glu Sight, a report can summarize the period you choose, including the number of readings, average glucose, median glucose, standard deviation, time in range, estimated A1C, hypo and hyper events, insulin totals, and daily glucose patterns.
That does not turn the report into medical advice. It gives you a clearer record to review, save, print, email, or bring into a conversation with your doctor or care team.
Your records are ready when you need them
The best time to prepare a report is not always the night before an appointment.
When your glucose and insulin history is already organized in Glu Sight, the report is there when you need it. You can open it from your iPhone, choose the date range, generate a readable PDF, export a CSV, and share the file without rebuilding your history by hand.
That matters in ordinary moments too. Maybe your care team asks for recent readings. Maybe you want to email a report before a visit. Maybe you want to print a copy, save one for yourself, or send your own data into another tool for deeper review.
The value is not only that the report exists. It is that your history stays accessible, available, and shareable when the moment comes.
PDF reports are built for appointments
When you are getting ready for an appointment, a PDF is often the easiest format to share.
It is readable without opening a spreadsheet. It can be attached to an email before a visit, printed and brought with you, saved with your other health documents, or opened on another device when you want to look through your recent history.
That matters because a good appointment report should not make someone work hard to understand what happened. It should give the main context quickly: date range, readings, glucose summary, time in range, insulin summary, and trend charts.

In Glu Sight, the PDF export uses your selected date range and your current glucose unit preference. If you track insulin, those entries can be included too, so glucose and insulin history can stay together instead of living in separate places.
CSV exports keep your records portable
A CSV file is different. It is not mainly about presentation. It is about ownership and flexibility.
CSV gives you a copy of your records in a format that can be opened by tools like Numbers, Excel, Google Sheets, or a database. It also gives you a clean way to bring your own history into AI chat tools such as ChatGPT or Claude for personal review.
For example, you might use an exported CSV to summarize your recent readings, group entries by week, look for repeated times of day, prepare questions before an appointment, or compare a recent period with an older one.

The important part is control. Your glucose and insulin records should not be stuck inside one app. Glu Sight Plus lets you export them, keep your own archive, and take the data further when you need to.
Manual logs and Apple Health data can live in one export
Not everyone tracks the same way.
Some people enter blood sugar readings manually. Some use compatible glucose data that appears in Apple Health, including data that may come from a CGM app or device ecosystem. Some people use a mix over time.
Glu Sight is designed around that reality. Whether a reading was logged by hand or synced from Apple Health, the goal is the same: keep a useful history that you can review later.
That also applies to insulin. If you track insulin in Glu Sight, your export can include insulin records alongside glucose history, so you are not piecing together separate logs when you need a clearer view.
Use exports for review, not medical advice
Exports are useful because they make your history easier to work with.
They do not replace your doctor, clinician, diabetes educator, lab testing, or medical judgment. Glu Sight does not provide diagnosis, treatment advice, dosing recommendations, or clinical decision support. AI chat tools should not be used as a substitute for medical advice either.
The safer use is practical: organize your records, review what you have logged, prepare questions, and bring clearer context into conversations with the people involved in your care.
Keep a record you can come back to
The best blood sugar report is not only a chart. It is a record you can return to when memory is not enough.
Glu Sight helps you track glucose, insulin, medications, Apple Health data, trends, insights, reminders, and reports in one clean iPhone app. When you need your history outside the app, PDF and CSV exports help you take it with you.