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Withings BPM Connect Wireless Blood Pressure Monitor $99 + Delivery ($0 C&C) @ JB Hi-Fi

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Same price as previous JB Hi-Fi deals

Until Sunday 17th December you can get 40% off^ the current ticketed price of a Withings BPM Connect Wireless Blood Pressure Monitor. Simply present the Exclusive Coupon below at any store in Australia or buy online by visiting jbhifi.com.au, adding the product to your shopping cart & entering the Exclusive Coupon code in the space provided at checkout.
Limit of 1 each per Coupon. Available instore and online. While stocks last. Offer ends Sunday 17th December 2023.

Related Stores

JB Hi-Fi
JB Hi-Fi

closed Comments

  • +2

    Quote is generic. Received the same offer

  • +1

    Anyone with Medibank successfully claim without a doctor’s referral?

    • Why do you need a referral?

      • Might get rejected from what I read

        • +3

          I've claimed with a letter from doctor. A simple one sentence saying the doctor supports home monitoring of blood pressure is enough

        • you cant use it on your penis

    • Oh under which clause can we claim this?

  • Thanks OP, need one

  • Good features for the price but would appear to have some accuracy issues (higher than normal measurements) from reading reviews.

    See: https://www.amazon.com/Withings-BPM-Connect-Pressure-Monitor…

    • Can confirm. My diastolic reads about 10% high on my machine. I spent a lot of time at the GP, doing multiple comparison tests against two of their machines to prove this. Raised it with Withings support, detailed all the process we'd been through, they just weren't interested, told me I was using the machine wrong. I gave up.

    • +4

      It's a big issue, I had this and every time it spits out a random number on the higher side. I had to return the item for a refund. It is as good as useless. You will definitely have higher blood pressure after using this

    • Hm, that makes it useless.

      • Maybe, maybe not. My GP says she's happy enough with my readings, as a home guideline, especially now that we're aware of the inaccuracy and can take that into account.

      • +1

        To be honest once you've 'calibrated' with another BP monitor you trust, this thing really is the best for making it easy to save and trend your BP/pulse data with minimal effort. It's not perfect, but definitely not useless.

        • That's the thing, A $100 BPM shouldn't require calibration.

  • Almost bought this last month but we learnt that Withings state a product life of only 3 years. Not very long.

    • it's probably because they lose calibration, these things need to be regularly recalibrated.

      • Is there a way for the user to calibrate it themselves at home or does Withings expect you to throw it out after the three years?

        • Yes it's a throwaway unless you can organize calibration.
          The same goes for the OTC BP monitors you buy from the chemist. They all have a footnote that says recalibrate regularly, in particular my omron one(s) recommend 2 years.

          I've used both side by side, one being about 3 years old now to check and it's not that far off, only maybe 5mmgh compared to the other. I tested my newer unit at uni with one of my lecturers checking it with a manual pump (we were being taught at the time) and it was pretty spot on from what he thought.

    • Tried to look it up, but couldn't find any reference to it. Do you know where it is stated? I would thought the 3 year life is related to the rechargeable battery if anything.

  • Not sure what sort of people would need this. It could be as simple as a LCD with voice prompt. With this, we would need a smart phone with BT connection, and an account to download an app from the vendor.

    • +3

      People trying to get their blood pressure down would probably find the automatic graphing of results beneficial to track progress.

    • What?

      It shows the measurements on the dotted display, just like in the photos 118 "Sys", it then scrolls to show the "Dia"

  • Got one thanks

  • +3

    There's no point in buying a measuring instrument that isn't accurate. Bells and whistles mean nothing

  • +1

    Thanks OP. But as someone who used one, it's wildly inaccurate and rather useless. Did multiple checks against the manual one and it's nearly always off by a noticeable margin.
    Returned it.

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