Equate blood pressure monitor class action overview:
- Who: HoMedics and Walmart are facing a class action lawsuit related to Equate blood pressure monitors.
- Why: The Equate blood pressure monitors are consistently and wildly inaccurate in readings for thousands of users, the Equate lawsuit claims.
- Where: The Equate class action was filed in federal court in California.
HoMedics and Walmart are facing a class action lawsuit saying that their Equate blood pressure monitors are consistently and wildly inaccurate for thousands of users who trusted the devices.
The Equate lawsuit cites a Northwestern University study that showed the monitors were only accurate within a range of “+/- 5.1 mmHg (with a 6.41 mmHG standard deviation) for diastolic pressure—meaning that for many users, the products are decidedly incapable of providing accurate and reliable measurements.”
“Worse, the Northwestern study shows that the products produce particularly inaccurate readings for users with normal to large arm circumference, which defendants knew, in part because they tested the products before bringing it to market and received hundreds of poor reviews,” the Equate class action says.
The inaccuracy of the readings is dangerous and has caused some used to go to the emergency room based upon readings that they later found out were inaccurate, according to the blood pressure class action lawsuit.
Equate blood pressure monitors should be recalled, lawsuit claims
The inaccurate and misleading representations about the accuracy of the blood pressure monitors lead to an unreasonable safety risk, according to the Equate lawsuit.
But Walmart and HoMedics have not recalled the Equate blood pressure monitors despite evidence that the monitors do not provide accurate readings, according to the blood pressure class action lawsuit.
“Plaintiffs bring this suit to halt defendants’ unlawful sales and marketing of the products and for economic damages sustained as a result,” the Equate lawsuit says.
Walmart misleads consumers by mislabeling its Equate brand over-the-counter cough medicines as “non-drowsy,” an early 2022 class action lawsuit claimed.
Have you used an Equate blood pressure monitor? Let us know in the comments.
The plaintiff is represented by Alexander E. Wolf of Milberg Coleman Bryson Phillips Grossman PLLC.
The Equate blood pressure monitor class action lawsuit is Doyle, et al. v. FKA Distributing Co. LLC d/b/a HoMedics LLC, et al., Case No. 2:23-cv-10807, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.
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85 thoughts onEquate class action claims blood pressure monitors provide inaccurate, inconsistent readings
My husband and I both have used these and get different readings. We’ve had different versions as well.
Yes I have used an equate blood pressure monitor
I have the equate wrist BP monitor and i notice the readings are all over the too. No matter the wrist that you use. So I will shop around and do research to find a better accurate one.
I have been using an equate blood pressure monitor for the past year since my triple bypass last year and have had consistently mixed readings.
This is the first I have discovered of the class action suit.
I have the equate wrist BP monitor and i notice the readings are all over the too. No matter the wrist that you use. So I will shop around and do research to find a better accurate one.
I was getting different reading on me and my mom and an my husbands was fine but I didn’t realize there was an issue after I found my mom dead the next morning an all I can do is think about those readings being wrong
Please add me
Today the equate BP cuff gave me the reading of 73/33, then 10 mins later 211/190 (that one had lasting pain in the outside of my wrist). I’m usually 120/80 btw.
The monitor always gave me an error code making my doctor think my blood pressure was higher than it actually was and causing me many appointments. I’m trying to join the lawsuit but can’t seem to find the link
Have to take several reading and store the best on phone app. 1 by upper arm unit motor failure e1 code