Abstract

The mean amplitude of glycemic excursions (MAGE) is an important indicator in the assessment of glycemic variability (GV) which is used as a reference for continuous blood glucose control. In this case, quantitative considerations in monitoring blood sugar in diabetes are very important for diagnosis and then proceed with clinical treatment. This study focuses more on strengthening the training and testing data processing system and reducing the independent variables that occur during the classification process. To support this purpose, this study uses Cross Validation as a training and testing data processing with the number of K-Fold is 10 and Naïve Bayes as a classification method. The resulting accuracy is 93% which is an increase from previous studies with an RMSE value (error value) of 0.267. It was concluded that patients in the pre-diabetic and diabetic groups tend to have more varied blood glucose values than patients from the normal class.

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