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Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor US $6.03 (AU $8.03) Delivered @ Dresslily

440
DL8010

Use coupon code - DL8010 at checkout and use 129 D points to bring the price down to US $6.03 (AU $8.03)

Health Monitoring Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor

Features:

  • Pressure measurement range, 0 - 280mmHg
  • Heart beat measurement range, 40 - 199 time / minute
  • Test accuracy: pressure ± 3mmHg, heart beat ±5%
  • 60 store groups memory measurements
  • Local tests for wrist circumference between 135 to 195mm
  • Large-scale digital LCD digital screen
  • Powered by 2*AAA batteries (Not included)
  • Automatic shutdown to save electricity and energy

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closed Comments

  • +12

    Is this the latest trend after fitness trackers ?

    • +3

      time to replace my fitbit :)

  • -1

    D points? Good thing I like the D!

  • +1

    "Automatic shutdown to save electricity and energy"

    This is a very valuable feature.

  • +2

    Back in the 80's

  • +2

    thanks op, bought it, i'm curious to see how it compares to my much more expensive one.
    if u pay with 28 degrees it charges at $7.59 :)

    • I'd like to know if it compares too.
      Will you take bp with both to check against each other?

      • Ditto please keep us updated :)

      • +1

        No need… A translated review of the exact item says: "Tested on two different instruments, similar results, promotional price very good"

    • +1

      God dahm it it auto changed to charge in Aud :(

    • +1

      I own a Oricom wrist sensor like this product as well as a proper arm one. The wrist sensor never seem to be very accurate. It also seems to be fairly inconsistent with the readings. In the end I stopped using it as the more expensive arm one was just so much better.

  • +10

    These wrist monitors are worthless. They NEVER give an accurate reading. Cheap but rubish

    • +1

      They NEVER give an accurate reading.

      • Test accuracy: pressure ± 3mmHg, heart beat ±5%
      • +5

        the American Heart Association does not recommend them.

        http://www.berkeleywellness.com/self-care/preventive-care/ar…

        Just because they quote that accuracy doesn't mean you will get it in non controlled circumstances. I think you need to be very precise with them. Despite that, I'm sure they are fine for casual monitoring. My Doc uses one on me although I think it costs a little more than this one

        • +4

          Thanks for the link.

          Interesting: "The researchers surmised that the artificially high readings were due to participants’ inaccurate positioning their wrists, which must be at heart level (not in the person’s lap or on a low table or armrest) to generate a correct reading."

          Even with upper arm unit: "The guidelines discuss proper cuff size and placement on the arm, as well as arm and body position, all of which can affect results. Ideally, you should wait five minutes in a quiet room before being tested. Neither you nor the practitioner should talk during the test. You should sit on a chair (not on the examination table), with your back supported, feet flat on floor, sleeve rolled up and forearm supported by the practitioner at your heart level. Crossing your legs, sitting with your back unsupported, letting your arm hang too low or holding your arm up by yourself can raise blood pressure. Using a cuff that’s too small for a large upper arm will give an erroneously high reading."

    • +4

      This. I do not recommend buying a wrist monitor. I used to have an OMRON (respectable brand) one and the readings are extremely sensitive to its position relative to your heart, your posture and the angle of your arm. With subtle movements you can go from hypotensive to hypertensive.

      Waste of time. Get one that measures at the upper arm if you are considering buying this as more than a toy.

    • +3

      Choice reviewed a bunch of blood pressure monitors a few years ago. There were good upper-arm models and bad upper-arm models. But the best value-for-money monitor was a basic wrist model. So the specific model can be more significant than general upper-arm versus wrist issues.

      Also, your blood pressure can vary dramatically just by standing up, rolling on your side if lying down, or from the food you eat (eg., coffee spikes blood pressure). So don't get too concerned about super accuracy.

      And with issues like white-coat hypertension and masked hypertension, your doctor's readings may not be any more accurate. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_coat_hypertension)

      What matters is your pattern over time. Measure you BP regularly in various circumstances, e.g., upon waking, standing, immediately after exercise and 30 minutes later, before and after meals, etc. Even if your BP device isn't crazy accurate, you'll quickly see when things start changing from your regular readings.

      • white-coat hypertension

        You just diagnosed me….now I have a name for it. Used to have to do 6 monthly medicals and my BP would go thru the roof just at the sight of one of those machines. Bit like Pavlov's dog

        • i'm guessing that you are subconsciously perceiving the visit as a stressful event (some underlying anxiety). sympathetic nervous system kicks in and sends your blood pressure up as part of a fight-or-flight response.

        • If you're worried (or more so your doctor) ask for a referral for a 24 hour test done via the cardiologist. I got it done and found out I have white coat syndrome. It's not a fun test as it runs overnight every hour so you sleep like shit but it's worth it to get to the bottom of your issues. Next up for me is a thyroid test. Woo.

    • So it's a cheaper fitness tracker then. I guess if you're going to get nonsense readings to monitor and get neurotic about you may as well pay less for the priviledge.

    • I have used an OMRON wrist monitor for years, and regularly check it against the doctor and chemists machines, and have found it to be consistently accurate. As mentioned, the technique of using it is a little different, it is important to follow the guidelines.

      (I also have 'white coat syndrome', fun!)

  • +5

    Pip-boy 1000

  • These are not as accurate as arm Bp monitoring

  • +1

    seriously cant be any good for that money

  • These guys took for ever to ship those sd cards, still havnt received mine.

    • +4

      Don't let that upset your blood pressure

  • Error,this promotion code has frequency of use restrictions, for 216889601

    • Looks like the blood pressure readings will be like the useless message on their website.

  • Can't use that promo code….
    "Error,this promotion code has frequency of use restrictions, for 216889601"

    • yep getting the same error

  • -1

    Now it shows how ridiculously overpriced fitbits are.

  • Also worth checking your health fund for rebates on expensive ones. I got the ihealth Bluetooth monitor for about $20 after rebate.

  • Cheap but rubbish for sure.

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