I have been using this product which was very reliable. Unfortunately after 8 months the first one could not charge. So I was sent a replacement and the second replacement the same thing happen. I believe that the sensors part is of not a good quality, as with wrist and skin respiration may cause rust and also not sure why the charging pins after a while sinks in.For a price of £199.00 its not a very good product. Its a shame because it has the making of a great product.
Do you know the Biobeat smartwatch? It has greater accuracy than the one you're showing and is FDA and CE approved. Additionally, it can be used for ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) due to its high precision.
Hey they are also doing a Dashboard for doctors now to track patients bloodpressure in real time. So this could get very interesting. Also you didn't show the possibility to create reports which I think is very handy! But good work!
I can’t actually understand your review. Are you saying it is accurate or not? I don’t know how it does it, just if it is accurate from your use/review?
I can only tell my own user experience as I cannot run studies with hundreds of patients like the ones I mentioned in the video. I cannot compare my own user results to those either.
@@Medicalfuturist Why would we trust the company's tests ahead of your comparisons? Cigarette companies were once ‘physician’ tested and approved. We know better now.
The difference is, with the Samsung you have to be still, raise your arm to your heart and then the watch strap inflates to take your BP, so essentially it’s the same as a traditional cuff blood pressure monitor. You might as well just use the £20 cuff.
Well it's quite a weak review sadly if it's a review at all :( You didn't talk much about your personal experience either.. you just mentioned that the technology is getting there...what does it mean? It's not here yet? Why? Any problems with the product? We have this and even after a week of usage we have much more to say than this ....
I have been using this product which was very reliable. Unfortunately after 8 months the first one could not charge. So I was sent a replacement and the second replacement the same thing happen. I believe that the sensors part is of not a good quality, as with wrist and skin respiration may cause rust and also not sure why the charging pins after a while sinks in.For a price of £199.00 its not a very good product. Its a shame because it has the making of a great product.
Is it connected through Bluetooth? I don't like smartphone tracking me through Bluetooth because privacy is often compromised.
yes
Bluetooth < Health
Doesn’t make sense
Do you know the Biobeat smartwatch? It has greater accuracy than the one you're showing and is FDA and CE approved. Additionally, it can be used for ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) due to its high precision.
I haven't tested it yet, thank you for the tip!
Dang..still now available in the States 🇺🇸 ??!!
Still not available according to their website.
Hi what’s your opinion about health stat BPro bp watch. Your response is much appreciated
I haven't tested it yet.
Kinda sucks i cant get hands on one of these in Slovenia. So if i get his right we can trust this bracelet as far as accuracy goes?
Hey they are also doing a Dashboard for doctors now to track patients bloodpressure in real time. So this could get very interesting. Also you didn't show the possibility to create reports which I think is very handy! But good work!
The report didn't look to me very different from what I saw on the dashboard, that's why I didn't mention it.
Huawei Watch D2 have ABPM function
Do you recommend another brand that’s more accurate?
I haven't come across any yet.
Do you have any idea about using simulators in medical education? This is my school project and i couldnt find anything interesting
I wrote about it here medicalfuturist.com/ar-in-medical-education/
@@Medicalfuturist Thanks!
Is there any watch which fellow human vein to monitor bp
I can’t actually understand your review. Are you saying it is accurate or not? I don’t know how it does it, just if it is accurate from your use/review?
I can only tell my own user experience as I cannot run studies with hundreds of patients like the ones I mentioned in the video. I cannot compare my own user results to those either.
@@Medicalfuturist you would make a great politician ;)))
It does a calibration with the cuff so if that means its accuracy does not drift over time I think that I would trust it.
I have been using it for the last 4 months. Absolutely great. Bought in Switzerland.
Thanks for sharing!
Where in Switzerland did you buy it? Was it a retailer or online?
@@dorisnite online. just bought mine
Is it available in Pakistan
It's available in India
Did you test the accuracy of the readings with a cuff?
I did but what do a few cross-measurements count when the company tests them in a study?
It does Count. @@Medicalfuturist
@@Medicalfuturist Why would we trust the company's tests ahead of your comparisons? Cigarette companies were once ‘physician’ tested and approved. We know better now.
What's the difference between this and the blood pressure monitor on a samsung watch ⌚️ 🤔?
The difference is, with the Samsung you have to be still, raise your arm to your heart and then the watch strap inflates to take your BP, so essentially it’s the same as a traditional cuff blood pressure monitor. You might as well just use the £20 cuff.
Where can we buy it in the USA?
Why to age 65? I am 66 going on 67 so is it no use for some reason?
This is how it's regulated on the market. I'm pretty sure it works well for you too.
? Didn’t answer the question.
How much it is accurate according to your experience?
As much as an individual user can compare it, it was good enough to me.
@@Medicalfuturist i also have read your previous replies. your replies are not the point but very political. i think you are from the company.
i have a smart band that will continously monitor BP and it was only $24 on wish...works well
Can you share the link?
Please share the link
Have you compared the accuracy to other devices?
I promise you, it’s not accurate.
what do u suggest about best sleep measung watch ?
It's not so simple: medicalfuturist.com/5-ways-for-sleep-tracking-a-week-long-experiment-with-apps-and-sensors/
Useless video. You should have at least measured your blood pressure traditionally and compared the results with what the watch says.
Doing one measurement matters nothing. The company releasing studies doing the same as part of a clinical trial does.
from where we can get it?
aktiia.com/
@@Medicalfuturistthanks 🙂
bitmore wrist blood kit
presure
Well it's quite a weak review sadly if it's a review at all :( You didn't talk much about your personal experience either.. you just mentioned that the technology is getting there...what does it mean? It's not here yet? Why? Any problems with the product? We have this and even after a week of usage we have much more to say than this ....
This might be more descriptive medicalfuturist.com/testing-a-wireless-wearable-glucose-sensor-freestyle-libre-review/
@@Medicalfuturist huh? it's a blood glucose monitor and not a blood pressure monitor.......
Doctor I started my travel from India , I reached Netherlands, I am just coming to meet you.
Clown
Light measurements are not accurate for blood pressure
PPG uses infrared light and it is accurate: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6426305
@@MedicalfuturistInteresting article. Thanks.
bitmore bloodpresure wrist
What is the correlation ?
Stratify correlation by age older ppl have stiffer arteries. Ppg not going to pick up variation.
I call it bullshit
Correlation between what?
Correlation between an arm sphygmomanometry (gold standard ) And the Aktia. Any Pearson correlation
That was unnecessarily terse.
@@zeaugusto8456Isn't the gold standard via an arterial line?
Scam alert!!
Why?