Breathe Easy, Live Smart! 🌟
The Vibeat WearO2 Pulse Oximeter is a cutting-edge wearable device designed for continuous monitoring of blood oxygen levels and heart rate. With a user-friendly design and a powerful app for data tracking, it offers seamless integration with your health management routine. Ideal for sports and aviation enthusiasts, this device ensures you stay informed about your body's performance throughout the day.
R**O
No es preciso
No es preciso para medir la oxigenación mide 4 unidades por debajo del estandar, lo probé con dos oximetros distintos y marcas mucho más baratas
D**0
WONDERFUl product!
Wonderful product! So very very helpful! I have asthma and sleep apnea, and I often wonder just how my heart and lungs are functioning during the day.Now I know every second. This WearO2 Pulse Oximeter was my answer. Comfy to wear, very Accurate, easy to use. VERY IMPORTANT… My $30 finger tip oximeters often do not work in the cooler weather because my fingers get too cold. I have not had this problem with these Vibeat products.I bought this daytime oxygen and heart monitor because it works very similar to their nighttime Wellue Oxygen Sleep ring… which I bought over 2 years ago. Both devices have VIBRATING alerts when your oxygen saturation drops too low. It’s customizable so you can set your own oxygen alert levels. The Daytime or Nighttime devices VIBRATE when your oxygen saturation drops too low.While this Oximeter wearable ring is not classified as a medical device, for me it is a wonderful adjunct and gives me great info that I can share with my physicians.I’m excited to start using this Daytime monitor because I’ve used my Wellue Oxygen Sleep Ring every night for over 2 years, and it’s wonderful… accurate and reliable. Two and a half years ago I didn’t even know these devices existed. I found it searching on Amazon for something to monitor my nighttime oxygen.Both devices monitor oxygen saturation AND pulse. Truly amazing!!! My new sleep apnea doc recommends the sleep ring to all her patients. When I see her next, I definitely will show her this new daytime device. It has a longer runtime than the nighttime sleep ring.Both devices let me and my docs know if my oxygen and cpap and asthma therapy are working like they should or if they need tweaking.It used to be very stressful going to sleep at night and wondering “what if my oxygen goes too low and I don’t wake up to breathe?” I no longer stress and worry about going to sleep because of the vibrating alerts from the ring.Both the nighttime sleep ring and this new daytime device make me feel much safer. The devices closely monitor my oxygen saturation and pulse rate and alert me when my oxygen is too low.HIGHLY recommend, especially if you have (or think you have) low oxygen, asthma, or sleep apnea.Ps… I did NOT have sleep apnea when I started to use the Sleep Ring 2 years ago. But a year ago after a serious surgery, the oxygen and pulse data from these devices helped my doctor determine that further sleep tests were immediately needed. And sure enough, the sleep tests showed my low nighttime oxygen levels had worsened and become sleep apnea.I’m a real person, I bought both these devices, and I was not paid to write this review. I buy tons of stuff from Amazon and rarely write reviews. But when I come across a truly wonderful product, I like to share the news.I am very thankful for these wonderful devices which help me monitor my oxygen and heart rate every day. I know they are not live-saving devices, but for me, they are close to it.
J**F
Underwhelming compared to 3 different Wellue SpO2
This is a review of the Vibeat WearO2 Pulse Oximiter Bluetooth.I own 3 similar-ish Wellue bluetooth recording SpO2 devices, the O2Ring, the CheckMe O2 Max, and the Bluetooth Fingertip and they are all much better performing inMy_never_HumbleOpinion.Pro:The display is better/brighter than the O2Ring and CheckMe O2Max but it's a small consolation prize.The display is always on and the clock mode replicates a watch in functionality.It works with the same Android app I use for the Wellue devices, easy to add on, that is nice!Con:The display frequently just goes wonky displaying flashing dashes on screen.The readings are often way different from many other SpO2 devices I own in addition to the 3 Wellue devices mentioned above. The Wellue and other devices all take very similar readings at the same time.It 'feels' like a toy compared to the very similar O2Ring and CheckMe O2Max.The ring on this thing does not perform well at all.The finger ring is tiny and I am 5'8" and very thin.The vibrator is weak even on high.It's possibly worth 1/2 what they now (Oct 2024) charge for it.It is now same price as I paid for the O2Max and the O2Ring and they are not worth their current very inflated prices either.The O2Ring is the 'nicest' InMyOpinion but short battery compared to the O2Max.This WearO2 toy has even shorter 'advertised' battery and is NOT as nice.I'm approaching the 12 hour mark and there is a lot left of the indicated battery remaining, this leads me to think the dashes on the screen reflect the ring being unpowered during times dashes are seen on the display. WTF???The O2Max with the wrist strap and wire is a sub-optimal solution but accurate with best battery.YMMV <- standard parachute rigger line of sight warranty on this review!(-:
D**S
More than I thought it would be.
I am recently diagnosed with sleep apnea. Even though this device is supposed to be for daytime use, I sleep with it. These last several nights I have been experimenting with sleeping with and without CPAP, on my back, on a wedge pillow and more. It has provided me with so much information that is very helpful in understanding my situation. Highly recommend!
R**Y
Wear O2 - big battery life - lasts 2 nights
Someone from Viatom got in touch with me, asking if I could write an honest review of their new product, the Wear O2, a recording pulse-oximeter with actigraphy. They offered to give a gift card for the purchase price if I tried it out for a while and did a writeup on Amazon.I have several overnight pulse-oximeters from this company, under different brand names. This technology has helped me to learn more about my sleep-disordered breathing than just about anything else. It's helped me improve many issues related to sleep quality and how I feel in the daytime. The one I use most is the O2 Ring that I first got under the Wellue brand, so I'll compare that with the Wear O2.The O2 ring battery will last maybe 16-18 hours when new, it turns on automatically when you stick it on a finger. It also keeps recording files until the battery is dead, so you can wear it past the 10-hour file size limit and it creates a new file. The Wear O2 is switched off until you activate it with the side button, but it turns off automatically after you remove it from your finger. The Wear O2 does automatically starts a new file after 10h, like the O2 Ring, and can keep recording beyond the 10h file limit (verified once last night 2024 Feb 19). The O2 Ring has the ability to change screen brightness, the Wear O2 does not. The ViHealth app, on the O2 Ring, gives you an 'O2 score' records the lowest O2 reading, the average, and counts the number of drops. For the Wear O2, it gives the score, the lowest O2 reading, and average. They also give data on the pulse rate, and a graph for both O2 and pulse.The Wear O2 has huge battery life, and I've successfully used it two nights between charges. I'd expect the battery to last many more cycles than the battery on the O2 Ring if you recharge it in the evening before each night. I've left it on my finger and added up all the files to see how many hours it records. Once it got to 22 hours, another time 22 1/2. You can see in one of the photos the Wear O2 is thicker, with more room for the generous battery.For advanced users, you can import the raw data into OSCAR, though it's not easy to do on an Android device and you have to hunt down the location of the file in the system data. Getting the file into OSCAR, you can look more carefully at patterns in pulse rate that can give insight into sleep quality.A couple of things put the Wear O2 a bit lower than the O2 Ring. One is how the silicone ring feels around the finger. The Wear O2 finger ring has the same shape as the one used in Checkme O2 max. I've attached a photo of the O2 ring up close, and the Wear O2. Right beside the thin silicone band that maintains tension is a little step where it gets wider. In the O2 Ring, that step is rounded and smooth, and does not irritate or tickle the finger at all. The Wear O2 has a sharper corner sticking out that can be annoying, and you may need to re-position it over a less sensitive part of your finger. I don't think there's an engineering reason to have this sharper corner, so maybe a future version might be able to use an idea more like what's used in the O2 Ring. The other aspect is accuracy. The big battery, and less wide band, of the Wear O2 means that it's more prone to shifting a little with movement, and this causes flat spots in the graphs (see photo) where the device lost track of the signal patterns. It seems to fill in the graph with the last reading over and over. It would be neat to have the app mark areas where the data is not valid, instead of making it look just a flat line, but that might be more advanced than they're willing to go.You might be able to get more consistent valid readings by taping down one side of the Wear O2 so it can't shift as easily with movement. As it is, it's good enough and does the job.One odd thing about the Wear O2 I bought is that the screen stays brightly lit for 5 minutes after you turn it on, or if you push the button during use to check the time. The O2 ring goes dark much sooner, so you don't have anything lighting up the bedroom. Both devices could use a feature to manually turn off the screen, maybe like cycling the button, but it's not implemented. It might be neat to implement an alarm clock function, too, which could silently vibrate to wake you at a certain time.Another thing they could do one day is implement data compression in the firmware. It would take extra code space, but more efficient data storage would make up for that.For a lower price, it's worth trying. It's bigger and more clunky than the O2 Ring, slightly less comfortable in some ways, more comfortable in that it doesn't squeeze so hard on the sides of the finger. It was able to give me decent graphs of my pulse while sleeping, and recorded similar patterns of drops in oxygen compared to the checkmeo2max and O2 ring. It also will vibrate to wake me up if I stop breathing a little too long, like the others.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago