Blood pressure monitor

« Back to Previous Page
0
Posted by deadprogrammer (Questions: 4, Answers: 2)
Asked on February 25, 2012 8:45 am
25311 Views

I'm looking for a professional quality blood pressure monitor - what should I get?

0
Posted by dlangendorf (Questions: 0, Answers: 1)
Answered On March 11, 2012 8:10 pm

If you have an iPhone, I like the Withings BP monitor and the iBP app. Really like having readings automatically recorded with graphs, history, and ability to email to my doctor.

0
Posted by yourlefthand (Questions: 0, Answers: 2)
Answered On March 11, 2012 8:45 pm

We recently purchased an Omron 10+ Blood Pressure machine. It can hold 100 readings for 2 users and includes the ability to download the data to a computer.

My wife took it in to the Dr's office and it gave the same reading as the nurse.

0
Posted by aquaregia (Questions: 0, Answers: 1)
Answered On March 13, 2012 3:58 pm

I have liked Omron 7300w. When I brought it to my Doc's for calibration, it was extremely close to the nurses reading (been a while so I forget how close, but definitely within clinical significance.) Doc said Omron makes the best home BP devices.

0
Posted by jcjewell (Questions: 0, Answers: 6)
Answered On March 14, 2012 4:14 pm

To preface, in my first career (from 1980-early 2000's), I was in software, working on everything-microcomputer, from higher level user interface software and networking APIs, and other communications projects, to assembly language code. I have a low tolerance for things that don't do what they're supposed to do. This is why I like Cool Tools, for find the...well, the cool tools.

Now I am a Registered Nurse in acute care, and although I do not use this unit at work, I was impressed enough with the reviews on Amazon.com that I bought this one for home to have a quick, simple way to take blood pressures on various family members. I have a good Welch-Allen manual sphygmomanometer (more commonly and easily referred to as a blood pressure thingy), but it's a pain to have to use the necessary stethoscope. Having said that, I do recommend that if you really need accuracy, to have it as a backup, particularly if you get a scary reading, whether your concern is high blood pressure, or low.

Anyway, to cut to the chase, I bought this Panasonic Blood Pressure Monitor about a year ago, and we love it. The thing that always amazes me is that it starts out with a very quiet hum--hardly noticable-- as it starts to pump up, but even that sound stops within a few seconds, and you continue to feel the cuff pump up. I imagine that it pumps up an internal air tank, and lets it out slowly, as needed.

I don't hesitate to recommend this unit to people.

« Back to Previous Page