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Santamedical Dual Color OLED Pulse Oximeter Fingertip, Blood Oxygen Saturation Monitor (SpO2) with Case, Batteries and Lanyard

  • Based on 31,932 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Monday, Sep 23
Order within 2 hours and 20 minutes
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Features

  • VERY ACCURATE READINGS - Our pulse oximeter has been clinically tested and consistently beat other pulse oximeter in terms of accuracy and reliability, it is found to be a fast and absolutely reliable gadget to use. It is ideal for the oxygen and pulse readings, and have a very small error margin.
  • SUITABLE FOR ALL AGES - This device allows for almost all size of fingers from children to adults due to the finger chamber design.
  • SPORTS ENTHUSIASTS - Intended for sport and aviation use. This device is ideal for using during high endurance and outdoor sports such as mountain climbing, running, biking.
  • BRIGHT & COMPACT - Bright OLED display allows clear reading in dark, inside home or in bright sunlight. Oxygen saturation monitor shows real time Pulse Rate, Pulse Rate Bar and SpO2 level. Light Weight, Easy to carry & Accommodates wide range of finger sizes.
  • LOADED WITH ACCESSORIES - Package includes 2-AAA Batteries to power up the Pulse Oximeter, Case to protect the Pulse Oximeter, Neck/Wrist Cord, User Manual, plus no-hassle 1 year warranty and friendly customer service.

Description

The Santamedical finger pulse oximeter measures your blood oxygen saturation and pulse rate. This device is designed for occasional and spot check monitoring.

Brand: Santamedical


Color: Black


Measuring Range: SpO2 70-100%, Pulse Rate 30-250 bpm


Number of Batteries: 2 AAA batteries required. (included)


Battery Life: 30 Hours


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.5 x 2.9 x 1.75 inches; 3.21 ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ SM-519BR-BL


Batteries ‏ : ‎ 2 AAA batteries required. (included)


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ March 30, 2020


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Gurin Products


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, Sep 23

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • It works
Easy to use and works well
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2024 by John J

  • burberry 7 with the “stuffed animal test” is wrong, and here’s why:
Ok, I want to first want to preface this by saying that I’m a medical doctor, so I do know a thing about pulse oximeters—both in theory and in practice. I noticed the top review has a picture of the pulse ox on a stuffed animal, showing at 99%, as “proof” it is inaccurate equipment. There are a number of problems with this supposition, and it shows a basic lack of understanding of how pulse oxes work. They are equipment that are designed to measure something specific under specific circumstances of being clipped to a fingernail with no opaque polish. NOT inanimate objects like markers and stuffed animals. A pulse ox works by shooting red light across the width of one of the middle fingers. Since tissues are translucent rather than totally opaque, the amount of light that is measured at the receiving sensor measures the proportionality of absorbed red light, which equals the proportion of material that absorbs it. This is called Beer’s Law. Pulse oxes are also governed by another law called Lambert’s Law, which says the amount of light absorbed is proportional to the length of the path that the light has to travel in the absorbing substance. The third law has to do with the fact that oxygenated hemoglobin (which in itself is red) absorbs more light than deoxygenated hemoglobin. This is due to the difference in wavelengths of red and blue light (red objects absorb more red light than blue objects). This is also why the test is not accurate if you have red nail polish on or your finger is not centered and light can move around it (or if you use a tiny pinky finger, for example). You can now see why it’s totally irrelevant how using a pulse ox on an inanimate object (especially, a bright red felt tail!) with totally different properties than an index finger is not a good way to judge accuracy. That’s like saying that your kitchen scale did not work well because you threw it in a swimming pool to measure the weight of the water. Equipment is only designed to work under particular circumstances and limitations. Anyway, I purchased this pulse ox for my father. He has COPD and a bunch of other risk factors for COVID-19, so I appreciate having a heads up if his oxygen sats dip. This is a good vital sign early marker for covid because it is an unusual disease, in that it causes what doctors have nicknamed “happy hypoxia”. You can google this to find out more, but it basically means that in other pneumonias that devolve rapidly into hypoxic conditions that require ventilation, their symptoms also crash, to the point where they lose consciousness or can barely talk. Covid-19 is more insidious and can creep up on some patients, who might be sitting up in bed (yes, symptomatic, but still conscious and talking), fooling even medical professionals into thinking their cases were not too serious until it was too late. This is the reason medical professionals find pulse oxes to be useful—they measure signs of disease (objective results from testing) rather than symptoms (subjective reports of feelings from patients). It gives me peace of mind to know my father has this and can measure it daily when he does his insulin shots and measures BP. He has chronic bronchitis, diabetes, stroke history, high blood pressure, obesity, and he is nearly 80, so he’s definitely in that very high risk category. On the actual unit, it was extremely easy to set up and use. You press a button and it turns on (once you put the batteries in the right way, lol); turns off automatically. I didn’t find anything inaccurate about it... and the hardest part of it was probably getting the lanyard in, haha (I advise using a needle to get the other end out of the hole; there’s no way a senior citizen could do this alone, so please help them). I’ve used many pulse oxes in my day. The professional ones in the hospitals are about 1% more accurate than these little portable, cheap pieces of equipment that you can buy for the home. I highly recommend them for any patients or elderly who have risk factors or disease comorbidities (especially, pulmonary). These little portable ones were sold out for months during the pandemic first peak (even hospital staff had trouble getting their hands on privately sold ones), so I’m glad to have one now. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2020 by Cece Cece

  • Pulse and oxygen meter
Works great. Measures the pulse rate and where my oxygen needs to be. Accurate and price is really good.
Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2024 by Lynne Grevera

  • Easy to read
This is easy to read and small enough to carry when traveling. Works great.
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2024 by Angie Z.

  • Nice Pulse Oximeter
The Santa Medical Pulse Oximeter (SM-519BR-BL) arrived quickly. The Pulse Oximeter itself appears as pictured on Amazon. It is lightweight and comes with a sturdy, woven nylon carrying case which utilizes a velcro closure. On the back of the case, there's a webbed 1" wide loop that allows this unit to be worn on a belt. Alternatively, the plastic D-ring sewn onto the back of the case would allow the oximeter to be clipped onto other gear. If you choose to use the lanyard to wear the unit around your neck, I'd advise putting the case on it to provide some additional protection. The pulse ox display screen is clear, bright, crisp and easy to read. It took the unit 4-5 seconds to display my results, although the manual states the "Data update period is less than 30 seconds." After removing your finger, your data disappears. Before the display totally blacks out, the screen shows "Bye-bye"; a surprise that made me smile & let me know that someone in the develpoment team has a sense of humor. This unit also comes with a lanyard, which the purchaser is to install. The lanyard itself seems sturdy and has a easy to use detachable clip to separate the device from the lanyard if the user wishes. The portion of the lanyard that attaches to the unit is a 3" (approx.) loop of thin, woven, nylon type cord. The ends of this thin cord are attached to one end of the detachabe clip. The wider part of the lanyard that is meant to go around your neck is 1/3" wide, flat webbed material that is attached to the other end of the detachable clip. The difficulty that I experienced was attaching the lanyard to the pulse ox unit. As per manual instrustions, I attempted to "Thread the thinner end of the lanyard through the lanyard hole." I was able to thread the thin cord loop (collapsed) into the lanyard hole but, the cord wasn't stiff enough to push out through the other side of the hole; tried about 10 times and was getting no where fast. Then I tried using the point of a pin to try & snag the loop cord since it was visible but just inside the lanyard exit hole; no good & I didn't want to scratch the unit. The solution that finally worked for me: I used an eight inch length of sewing thread, ran it through the thin cord loop then brought the ends of the thread together. I gently pushed the ends of the thread through the lanyard hole and it brought the thin cord loop through the hole easily. Donna Beebe 8/16/20 ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 20, 2020 by Jerry

  • Good instrument to measure body
quick and easy way to measure you oxygen level and pulse.
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2024 by Jo.s reads.

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