Wellue Oxylink Wireless Wearable Health Monitor Bluetooth Pulse Meter with Audio Reminder in Free App – Rechargeable Wearable O2 Monitor
$119.99
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FREE APP FOR iOS AND ANDROID: Unlimited storage in App Vihealth, viewing real-time blood O2 & heart rate in App Dashboard. Connect the device with APP via Bluetooth.
COMFORTABLE SOFT RING SENSOR: The lightest, smallest ring sensor for overnight continuous monitoring, durable and adapt to most fingers.
AUDIO REMINDER IN DEVICE: The audio reminder in device will be triggered when the O2 level and heart rate fall below the pre-set threshold, prevent from a low-O2 and heart rate status. You can adjust the volumn, O2and heart rate threshold in APP.
AUDIO REMINDER IN APP DASHBOARD: The audio reminder in App Dashboard will be triggered when O2 level and heart rate fall below the pre-set threshold. The reminder works only when your phone stayed in Dashboard and not locked.
PROFESSIONAL REPORT: Easily share and check graphic report and trends of blood O2, heart rate and body motion. NOTE: This device is for Sports and Aviation use only and not intended for medical use.
Bruce brewer –
Product works great , We had a small issue and the Customer service was very friendly and handled my request. I would recommend them to anyone
Andrew A. Russell –
I picked this up to build a nightly log of my oxygen levels and pulse for several months. I picked up two versions of this to compare. The first was this thumb monitor (that works almost as well on your index finger), and the second was a big wrist-mounted version.Having tried both (sometimes at once to compare), I MUCH prefer this small, simple monitor. The results are identical, and using it has revealed that my O2 occasionally crashes to 82-85% for about 4-5 minutes several times a night.I will also add, that you can configure alerts/warnings on the device using the App, so that it will beep, vibrate and wake you up if you fall too low… (pretty much ensuring you wake up immediately) if you are wearing it. I initially set my warnings at 92% but I evidently touch on that (For a fraction of a second) often enough that it was constantly waking me up. I eventually settled on 89-90% alerts because those are the frightening ones.I highly recommend this if you are curious and want to monitor yourself. It’s a wake-up call for me to go do a sleep study… and it’s a temporary stop gap to wake me. I find that I need to recharge it about once every 2 days (about 16-20hrs of use). The logs do sometimes segment at odd intervals over a 6-8 hour night, but I think it might relate to me pressing a button to stop the alert. I don’t loose any time, but sometimes the night will be divided into 3-5 parts… some only 20 minutes long… others 3-4 hours. The log segments all gets stitched back together in the app, so that’s not a huge issue unless you want to browse and zoom in the next day.As long as your phone/tablet is near the monitor, it immediately connects and downloads the data about 2-3 seconds after you slide it off your finger in the morning.One final note…. this is also superior to the wrist version because the finger monitor charges with a simple micro-usb cord…. from any charger. The wrist version has a weird square square USB cord that is not quite a “Mini USB”, but is somewhat like that form factor. Since I mostly only have chargers for Micro, USB-C and Lightening Port…. and a few Mini…. a 5th USB cord type (with the wrist version) is inconvenient.Oh, and these will light up your finger or thumb like E.T. in a dark room. That’s how the sensor sees your blood sloshing through your body. The device recommends that it be placed on your thumb. It also works (with perhaps a +/- 1% decrease in accuracy) on a big index finger if that’s more convenient. The takes a little longer to initialize on my index finger. But, I have big male hands… and my index finger is about the same circumference as my thumb. I found I catch it on less things overnight on my index finger, and I’m not looking for “Perfect results”.Unless the difference creates a hardship, I recommend this more expensive finger version for the extra cost. Especially if this is for yourself, and you don’t need to keep it out of the way.
Roy N. –
Unfortunately I have been disappointed so often by products from companies I’ve never heard of, that I did not have high expectations for this device. However, I made a bad assumption in this case. This is a very nice device with one major drawback.I’ll start with the instructions. They were not perfect but they were adequate and won’t require someone who is super sophisticated to figure them out. I was able to understand exactly how to use this and the monitor paired with my phone surprisingly fast. It was immediately recognized without any trouble.The monitor is comfortable and securely stays on your finger. It does not fall off even when tossing and turning in bed.The app is really the only shortfall of this system. First and foremost because the app itself is a whopping 104 MB and there is no reason whatsoever for a simple app like this to be so large. This is the result of brutally awful, lazy developers not caring about the footprint of their bloated app. For comparison the Chrome browser on my phone is only 45 MB.The other shortcoming is that the reports can only be exported as screenshots. You can’t copy and paste information out or anything like that. The app does show you quite a lot of data but isn’t smart enough to identify any issues or point out any potential problems. You have to do your own interpretation of the data that is collected.I cannot speak to the accuracy of the monitor but since very inexpensive monitors are known to be accurate I will give it the benefit of the doubt. This also monitors your heart rate/pule and I do not know if other products do the same.I am awarding five stars because of the ease of use and the fact that it won’t fall off like something you put on the tip of your finger might. The app is a mixed bag because even though it is user friendly and collects lots of data, it could be better.I have not used another monitor to compare this with but based on my experience with this model I can recommend it. However, it sounds like some competing products might produce better, more robust reports. But I have not tried or tested them.*Thanks for taking the time to read my review, I hope I have helped you make an educated purchase decision about this product. If I did, please take a moment to let me know by clicking or tapping on the “Helpful” button, which helps me learn from my experience to write even better reviews! Thank you in advance!*
Kevin & Liz –
I got this to use to find out if I’m having any sleep apnea issues overnight. My throat is dry a lot in the morning so I know I’m sleeping with my mouth open and snoring. I’m very concerned that I have sleep apnea. I was able to check my oxygen levels using this while I sleep. I have the alarm set tonight and I’ve only had it go off once in the past few days while I was sleeping. And that was really late in my sleep cycle. Other than that my oxygen levels have looked pretty good while I’m sleeping and throughout the day. I have checked the pulse rate monitor against my Garmin watch and they are very consistent. Both use similar technology to monitor the pulse rate and I tend to believe this pulse rate more so than my Garmin watch. It certainly been reassuring to know that my oxygen levels are okay throughout the night. Sleep is important for recovery. This device will also come in very handy for if and when myself or one of my family members comes down with a cold. A couple of my kids have asthma really bad and have some flare-ups occasionally. I plan on having them wear this to monitor their oxygen levels when they get sick. This is a good measuring tool to see how their blood oxygen level is doing. If it gets down too low then, we’ll know we need to take them to the hospital. This is a very good useful tool. The only issue with this device is the battery is only good for a couple of days of continual use and has to be recharged. But other than that it’s a great device to have in the toolbox.
brahim –
This product is easy to use is the best and comfort I can’t get better product n this
Mark Williams –
After two week in the hospital with Covid-19 phunoma I knew I was going to have to track my blood o2 closley. This unit does the job perfictly. You ware like a ring and leave it. Works great for sleeping with the ability to set alarms levels and loudness. Batter lasts 10hrs.+.
Peter Quick –
We got this for my mother in law who is on oxygen 24/7. Here oxygen cord got disconnected accidentally and her oxygen got very low before she realized. Got this so it warns her way before it gets dangerous. She also tried it at night to see how her levels were at night. She says it’s comfortable to wear and works really well.
CAR –
Perfect for continuously monitoring my oxygen levels and just what I was looking for. Alarm wakes me when my oxygen falls too low. Comfortable to wear and seems accurate. Works well so far. I like that I can save and share the readings with my doctor if I want to.
Daniel J. Barthel –
I tried the $49 watch every senior needs and it seemed like it made up numbers. Not so with this device. I compared it to the $11k unit in my doctor’s office and the results were identical. If you want to be lied to, go cheep. If you want reality, buy this.
Adam Stacey –
I use this product to monitor my oxygen at night when I sleep it also has an alarm feature on it if you oxygen drops below the threshold you set. Excellent!