When is oximetry useful for an older adult?
It’s most helpful for seniors with conditions like COPD, asthma, or heart failure, and for monitoring recovery from a respiratory infection. For a healthy older adult with no lung or heart issues, routine monitoring usually isn’t necessary.Why can readings be harder to get on older fingers?
Aging can bring cooler hands, thinner skin, and reduced circulation, all of which weaken the signal. Warm the hands first, rest the hand on a table, remove dark nail polish, and wait several seconds for the number to settle. Conditions like Raynaud’s or low blood pressure can also lower the reading — see our accuracy guide.What oxygen target should we watch?
For most people a normal SpO2 is about 95–100%, but people with chronic lung disease may have a lower personal target set by their doctor. Use that target rather than a generic number, and focus on the trend over days rather than a single reading.How should caregivers use the readings?
Check at consistent times, log the number alongside how the person is breathing and feeling, and look for a downward trend rather than reacting to one low value. A good record helps the doctor far more than scattered numbers. SonoHealth’s fingertip Pulse Oximeter makes quick daily spot-checks easy.When does a reading mean call the doctor?
Follow the targets your clinician set. In general, a persistently low or falling reading, or any real difficulty breathing, warrants a call — and breathing emergencies warrant 911. Don’t wait for the device to “confirm” obvious distress.Related: Understanding SpO2 and Pulse Oximetry · Oximetry With COPD or Asthma · Oxygen During Respiratory Illness · Accuracy Guide

