InPulse - Heart Rate Monitor

InPulse - Heart Rate Monitor

By AIBY

  • Category: Health & Fitness
  • Release Date: 2019-12-07
  • Current Version: 2.59
  • Adult Rating: 12+
  • File Size: 86.57 MB
  • Developer: AIBY
  • Compatibility: Requires iOS 15.0 or later.
Score: 4.6
4.63595
From 151,159 Ratings

Description

MONITORING HEART’S ACTIVITY DAILY IS YOUR WAY TO WELLBEING AND BEAUTY Never miss a beat with InPulse! Check your heart rate, log your blood pressure, and record your oxygen saturation with your iPhone. Simply place your finger on the camera to measure your heart rate. Receive reminders to check your pulse and log your vitals on a daily basis so you can stay well and fit. Get your stress levels under control and negative emotions identified and leveled. The Main Advantages of the App: - Measure your heart rate using your fingertip and camera. - Use Journal to record your blood pressure and oxygen saturation. - Get daily wellness assessments and lifestyle advice. - Develop beneficial habits with our Habit Tracker. - Take tests to explore and manage your emotional wellbeing. - Follow our Self-Love Program to achieve harmony and peace of mind. - Add tags and comments to your measurements. - Integrate with Apple to use your pulse measurement data across your devices, making tracking your heart and overall quality of life even easier. How to Check Pulse Using Finger: - First, make sure your fingers aren’t cold. When checking your pulse, be sure your fingertip completely covers the camera lens and flashlight. - Press gently with your finger. Pressing too hard may result in reduced blood flow, which will make it more difficult to get an accurate result. The app requires iOS 15.0 or later. You can choose a free trial with all features available. UNLIMITED ACCESS TO ALL FEATURES - You can subscribe for unlimited access to all the app has to offer. - Subscriptions are billed automatically at a rate depending on the selected subscription plan. Important Note The app is not designed for medical purposes. It is meant only for fitness use and as a source of general wellness information. By using the app, you are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use: http://aiby.mobi/pulse/terms/ http://aiby.mobi/pulse/privacy/ Have questions? Check out the FAQ page at http://aiby.mobi/pulse/ Or contact our support team: http://aiby.mobi/pulse/support/ Heartily yours, AIBY team

Screenshots

Reviews

  • It works for keeping track

    5
    By Crypttvfan12
    It keeps track of my heart rate very well
  • Driving

    5
    By Chosen3100
    His
  • I’ll pass

    1
    By stop, dont do it 2020
    Just based of the reviews, I changed my mind. Seem like everyone is having the same issues. Scam and charging inappropriately. Doesn’t take Bp ….. all noted📝
  • Swindler

    5
    By Shjajsjss
    Definitely not a nice app
  • Disappointing

    1
    By Elijames1026
    There is no free version. It’s all behind a paywall. The metrics are off- specifically the “heart score”. When I questioned their support about how it gets calculated they couldn’t answer my question. Get a FitBit or Apple Watch. You’ll get consistent monitoring without paying a ridiculous price and get more accurate results. Also the description claims it monitors blood pressure and oxygen, which is not accurate. It only measures your pulse. So this is false advertising.
  • Question not answered yet

    1
    By angelr2nd
    How do you get reimbursed for payment, I cancelled subscription and was charged?
  • Beware

    1
    By Skoaling
    It is not $6.99 for the app, it is $6.99 weekly!!
  • Cancel Subscription

    1
    By parkman71
    Cancel Subscription
  • Great but my finger is not always recognized

    4
    By Dawhite57
    I love the information it gives but I have a very hard time getting it to read my finger. I have to push down on one side of the phone so it reads - sometimes.
  • Doesn’t Work Offline

    1
    By GROK*Cliff
    While working far from cell service, I started to feel nauseated and light-headed. I sat down in the shade, got a drink of cool water, and pulled out my phone to use this app to check my heart rate and blood pressure. I was sure that both were high, and I wanted to track them and make sure I didn’t go back to work too soon. Nada. The app doesn’t work at all if it can’t connect to the Web. As with many other apps, I had expected to be able to record data whenever and wherever I needed to and load it whenever I returned to fast wifi. Nope. Besides, because it won’t work if it can’t connect it will be eating up your data plan whenever you use it without wifi. UPDATE: The developer responded that their app is not intended to provide medical information and that when I experienced these symptoms I should have contacted a health institution or health professional. OK, so, first, don’t rely on it for pulse and other medical data. If the information it gives isn’t valid for how hard you’re pushing yourself in the wilderness, then it isn’t valid for how hard you’re pushing yourself in the gym, either. Don’t believe its measurement of your pulse rate, and definitely don’t believe its blood oxygen reading. Second, as for contacting a medical professional, our cars were a half-hour hike away over rugged terrain. In my condition, I would need to take that part slow, so it might have been more like 45 minutes, maybe an hour. From the cars, it was an hour’s drive to the nearest paved road. From the beginning of pavement to the nearest medical facility is a 50-minute drive. Along most of that trek, cell service is spotty at best. So rather than use an app to help me pace myself on the way out of the canyon, at which point I could use the app to assess myself again, the developer thinks I should have hiked for at least 30 minutes and then driven for another hour and 50 minutes to get in line at an emergency room and find out if I needed medical assistance. Right. Oh, and that nearest wifi—wouldn’t getting that far have helped me out? Not really. It was also an hour’s drive from the cars, so I wouldn’t have gotten there until at least 90 minutes after I tried to use the app in the canyon. But it wasn’t in the same direction as the highway, so once I got there I still would have been an hour’s drive from the pavement, or an hour and 50 minutes from the nearest medical facility. Under the constraints defined by the developer’s disclaimers in response to my initial review, I don’t see a need that this app satisfies.

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