🩺 Track your health like a pro — precision meets convenience at home!
The A&D Medical UA-767FAC is a clinically accurate, multi-user digital blood pressure monitor designed for home use. It features a wide-range cuff fitting most adult arms, stores up to 60 readings per user for 4 users, and offers one-button operation with a large LCD display. Enhanced by Snapshot Averaging technology and compatible with the A&D Heart Track App, it ensures reliable, easy health monitoring backed by a 5-year warranty.
D**Y
So accurate!
That's what we need for home and travel use. Great quality!
B**H
Good price
So nice I love it easy to use accurate blood pressure
S**Q
Excellent
Excellent
M**Y
works great
works fine - only issue is the line from the unit to the arm band is shorter than one we had previously.
P**M
Very accurate
Took this monitor to my doctor twice to check its accuracy against doctors and it was really close. Had bought a different previous one and it was way off. Returned that one and am happy with this one. Doctor approved this one.
M**.
Recommended!
Works very well. Scored very well in Consumers Reports review, especially for accuracy. Got the one that uses batteries and has a plug in power supply so we wouldn't have to replace batteries as often. The cuff that came with it fits down to a smaller arm diameter than any of the others which was important to fit properly on my wife.
M**T
works well and as it should
Purchased for my parents (73 & 75) they like it a lot and say it works like their old one which was from the VA. Its been a few weeks they use it almost daily and its still going strong. Will update this review if it dies an early death.
K**T
Do your own research and buy something good
I had purchased a $25 BP monitor from Walmart a few months back. It seemed to work fine and had it "calibrated" 3 separate times by local clinics. BTW, "calibrated" is a lie - they want to check your machine against theirs and see if it is close. That is not calibration. Anyway, the $25 was verified 3 different times locally, and when the Mayo Clinic demanded I bring it in for "calibration", they were kind enough to tell me that it was garbage and I needed a new one. They strongly recommended an A&D monitor. After doing my own research, I sent the Mayo a message saying that the Omron monitors were better rated from accuracy, quality, and features at a better price. They still insisted I purchase the A&D model - so I did.After checking this A&D model against the $25 generic one over two days, it wasn't any more accurate than the $25 one I had been told was garbage. Now this doesn't mean this one is not accurate, it just means it won't pass muster at the Mayo Clinic. Take that as you will.Accuracy aside, this monitor is a nightmare to use if your blood pressure is over 180/XXX. It climbs slowly. Then, it drops incredibly slow - 1 pt every 0.5-1 second and often once it has compressed your arm to the point where you are sure it is going to burst, it wants to pump it back up and try again. I have never had a cuff this incredibly painful, and the worst part is that often, when you turn it off to try and save your arm, it won't release the pressure on the cuff! I had to pull the hose out of the side of the unit just to get it to let go of my arm several times! That is NOT ok! I tried to take my BP every 3-4 hours for 2 days with this unit and ended up with 3 usable readings because I had to abandon the rest.At $55, the features on this unit are minimal at best. It doesn't store enough measurements. It doesn't do the averaging the Omron Series 10 units do ($5 less btw), and did I mention it HURTS to use the dang thing? Overall this unit was a dismal failure. I'm sure if your BP is in the 140's on a regular basis you can make this work, but why spend $5 more to get less? I ended up returning this and buying the Omron 10 that I wanted in the first place and saved myself $5. The features are better, the unit is easier to use, and it don't try to see if it can make my arm pop or at least turn purple when I try to use it.Save your money. Buy something better. Don't buy the machine that tries to crush your arm. Pain increases BP. Kinda seems like you would want to cause as little pain as possible if BP is something you are trying to measure, no?
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