BP and Sugar Log Template
Track blood pressure and glucose readings with context, then move the same pattern into homecare by fit-byte for shared family visibility.
What to record
- Date and time
- BP systolic / diastolic
- Pulse
- Sugar value with context (fasting, random, post-meal, bedtime)
- Who recorded the reading
- Notes for your clinician
How caregivers should use this log
Record readings at the same times each day whenever possible. Add notes when values are unusual, symptoms are present, or medication timing changed.
Doctor review section
Bring the last 7 to 14 days to appointments. Highlight readings outside your clinician's target range and note any medicine changes during that period.
Filled example (print-style)
| Date | Time | BP (sys/dia) | Pulse | Sugar | Context | Recorded by |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-06 | 07:30 | 130/82 | 76 | 108 | Fasting | Caregiver RS |
| 2026-06-06 | 13:30 | 136/86 | 80 | 168 | Post-meal (2h after lunch) | Caregiver RS |
| 2026-06-06 | 21:00 | 128/80 | 74 | 142 | Bedtime | Family |
Doctor review notes: Post-lunch sugar trending higher this week; continue same medicine, reduce refined carbs, review after 7 days.
Move trends into homecare by fit-byte
Use the same fields digitally so family members and clinicians can review trends by date, time, and context without relying only on photos of printed sheets.
Need the blank sheet directly? Open the printable template page: /templates/bp-sugar-log
Frequently asked questions
- Should I note fasting or post-meal sugar readings?
- Yes. Write the context (fasting, random, post-meal, bedtime) so your doctor can interpret trends correctly.
- Who should record BP and sugar at home?
- Usually the caregiver on shift records readings and initials the row. Family members can add review notes before a clinic visit.
- How do I prepare this log for a doctor visit?
- Bring the last 7–14 days, highlight unusual readings, and note any medicine changes. HomeCare can export a structured summary from digital entries.
- Is this log enough to diagnose a condition?
- No. Home monitoring supports your care team but does not replace examination or lab tests.

