The common medical devices don’t work as well for Black patients. The FDA is now trying to do something about it.
The Food and Drug Administration on Monday bolstered its recommendations for pulse oximeter testing following public uproar over how inaccurate readings led to different medical care for patients of ...
Researchers from UCSF are leading an effort to find out which pulse oximeters work equally well on all skin colors.  NBC News ...
Manufacturers increasingly but still infrequently follow Food and Drug Administration guidance that recommends testing pulse oximeters on participants with a range of skin pigmentations, according to ...
The FDA announced its draft guidance on recommendations for studies assessing pulse oximeters to ensure the devices perform ...
Individuals with darker skin tones may have difficulty using certain medical equipment according to recent studies.
Manufacturers increasingly but still infrequently follow FDA guidance that recommends testing pulse oximeters on participants ...
Draft recommendations from the FDA call for larger, more inclusive studies to ensure pulse oximeters work for people with ...
These devices, crucial for measuring blood oxygen levels, have shown discrepancies in accuracy when used on darker skin, leading to potential health risks for non-white patients, the study states ...
Historically, companies haven’t been required to include a significant number of dark-skinned people in studies of pulse oximeters. “Quite frankly, how we’ve measured it hasn’t been ...
But her request for supplemental oxygen while hospitalized was denied, Starr said, because readings from a pulse oximeter on her finger falsely indicated that she was getting plenty of air on her own.