Live Reviews:
OxiTone

OxiTone

A closure focus

⭐️2 / 5
Rating
🙌1
Ratings
📼5 scs
Content
📦w/o updates
Updates frequency
🗣❌ unsupported
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All Versions of OxiTone

2.13.88

January 31, 2023

Performance improvements

1.3

December 1, 2022

Performance improvements

1.2

November 3, 2022

The app is now available in Italian

1.1

June 18, 2021

Bug fixes and performance improvements

1.0

February 8, 2021

Price History of OxiTone

Description of OxiTone

The OxiTone mobile app enables tracking patient physiological data such as blood oxygen level (SpO2), pulse rate and activity. In addition, it helps track supplementary oxygen use and includes a medical questionnaire to assess health status. Data can be entered manually or the app can be set to receive data from Oxitone medical devices automatically.

OxiTone: FAQ

Does OxiTone support iPad devices?

Yes, the OxiTone app is compatible with iPads.
The app was developed by Oxitone Medical Ltd.
The OxiTone app requires iOS 11.0 or later.
2.0 out of 5 is the disappointing rating that OxiTone has received from users.
Medical Is The Primary Genre Of The Oxitone App.
2.13.88 is the latest released OxiTone version.
OxiTone’s most recent update was on July 3, 2024.
The app first launched on February 5, 2023.
Some content may be too intense or graphic for younger viewers, recommended for ages 17 and up.
OxiTone currently features the following languages: English, French, German and 7 more.
No, OxiTone is not on Apple Arcade.
No, OxiTone does not integrate in-app purchases for users.
Unfortunately, OxiTone is not tailored for compatibility with Apple Vision Pro.

Screenshots of OxiTone

iphone
ipad

Alternatives to OxiTone

Reviews of OxiTone

  • App often doesn’t work, crashes

    Besides crashing sometimes when I open it, this app often fails to record data properly from the device. I wear it on my wrist all night, and I see the blue Bluetooth light along with spo2 and o2 numbers, but then the app will sometimes show no or little data in the report for the night. I don’t know where the failure is, but the app seems problematic since the device itself is displaying the expected results. And sometimes, the app shows dangerously low o2 levels (70s and 80s) which I know are false because I was awake and breathing fine when these events supposedly occurred, or I wasn’t even wearing the device when it showed those results.
    I am doing this as part of a research study, and look forward to when it’s over!