Key Features

Built to the spec
clinicians trust.

01

Clinical Accuracy

Validated against ANSI/AAMI SP10 and ESH protocols for professional and home use.

02

Multiple Cuff Sizes

Pediatric, adult, large adult, and thigh cuffs to match patient anatomy — proper cuff size is the #1 factor in accuracy.

03

Manual & Digital

Aneroid sphygmomanometers for clinical use and digital automated monitors for home and point-of-care.

04

Memory & Data

Digital monitors store readings for trend tracking and clinical review.

Clinical Use / Vital Signs Monitoring

How clinicians
use this product.

Blood pressure monitors, stethoscopes, sphygmomanometers, and vital signs equipment for hospital, clinic, and home monitoring.

Indications

Clinical use cases.

  • Routine vital signs monitoring in hospital and clinic settings
  • Home blood pressure monitoring for hypertension management
  • Pre- and post-surgical BP assessment
  • Cardiology evaluation and medication titration
  • Geriatric and pediatric primary care

Application Technique

Step by step.

01

/ 05

Size the cuff.

Select a cuff where the bladder width covers 40% of arm circumference. Wrong size is the most common cause of inaccurate readings.

02

/ 05

Position the patient.

Seated, back supported, feet flat, arm at heart level. Avoid recent caffeine, smoking, or exercise. Rest 5 minutes before reading.

03

/ 05

Place the cuff.

Wrap the cuff around the bare upper arm, 1 inch above the antecubital fossa, with the artery marker over the brachial artery.

04

/ 05

Take the reading.

Inflate 20–30 mmHg above the estimated systolic. Deflate slowly (2–3 mmHg/sec). Record the first and last Korotkoff sounds for manual, or read the digital display.

05

/ 05

Repeat and average.

Take 2–3 readings one minute apart and average. Document arm used, position, and any notes.

Contraindications & Cautions

When not to use.

  • Avoid the arm with an AV fistula, recent mastectomy (same side), or PICC/IV site
  • Cuff sizes out of range produce inaccurate readings
  • Atrial fibrillation and some arrhythmias reduce accuracy of automated monitors

Typical Care Settings

Where it's used.

  • Hospital
  • Primary Care Clinic
  • Cardiology
  • Home Health
  • Long-Term Care

Clinical use information is provided for reference only. Always follow facility protocols, manufacturer instructions for use (IFU), and evidence-based practice guidelines. Consult the treating clinician before use.

Regulatory & Quality

FDA
Class II
Latex
Latex-free
Sterility
Non-sterile
Biocompatibility
ANSI/AAMI SP10

Standards & Certifications

  • FDA Cleared
  • ANSI/AAMI SP10
  • IEC 80601-2-30

How It Compares

McKesson Brand vs. the alternatives.

A spec-by-spec comparison with the most common alternatives in the vital signs monitoring category. Clinical interchangeability varies — always verify with your care team or facility protocol.

Spec

This product

McKesson entrust™ Digital Oral Thermometer, 1 Box of 25

Validated home monitor

Omron Platinum Upper Arm

Clinical aneroid sphyg

Welch Allyn FlexiPort Aneroid

Cuff Size9"–17"Adult / large adult / thigh
Measurement MethodOscillometric (automated)Manual auscultation
Memory200 readings / 2 usersN/A
PowerAC adapter / 4 AA batteriesN/A
Validated ProtocolsAAMI, BHS, ESHANSI/AAMI SP10
Warranty5 yearsLifetime gauge calibration

Comparison is provided for reference only. Brand names and trademarks belong to their respective owners. Specific SKUs may differ from category averages shown above.

About the Brand

McKesson Brand.

Trusted manufacturer

An established medical products manufacturer supplying clinical teams with quality healthcare supplies.

FAQ / Vital Signs Monitoring

Frequently asked.

Answers to the questions clinical buyers and care teams ask most about this product category.

Upper arm vs. wrist monitor — which is more accurate?

Upper arm monitors are more accurate because the brachial artery is closer to heart level and the surrounding tissue is consistent. Wrist monitors can be accurate if used with proper positioning (wrist at heart level), but upper arm is the clinical standard.

How do I know my cuff is the right size?

Measure the mid-upper arm circumference. The cuff should list a range that includes your measurement. If your arm is between sizes, choose the larger cuff. An undersized cuff gives falsely high readings; oversized gives falsely low.

Why does my home reading differ from the clinic?

'White-coat hypertension' raises BP at the clinic. Home readings can also differ due to cuff size, technique, time of day, and recent activity. Take home readings at the same time each day, seated and rested, and bring the log to your clinician.

How often should I calibrate my monitor?

Digital monitors should be checked annually against a calibrated aneroid or mercury reference. Aneroid sphygmomanometers should be calibrated every 6 months in clinical use. Most manufacturers offer recalibration services.