Flawed oxygen readings possibly behind COVID-19 toll on people of color in U.S.: Politico
NEW YORK, July 5 (Xinhua) -- Doctors have sometimes failed to diagnose serious cases of COVID-19 among people of color, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) acknowledges one reason may be flaws in devices it approved to measure blood oxygen levels, reported Politico on Saturday.
"Pulse oximeters can overestimate blood oxygen in people with dark skin, causing doctors to miss patients' distress signals," said the report.
The FDA is convening an expert advisory panel later this year to assess the problem and offer guidance to health care providers. An agency spokesperson said it has prioritized assuring that pulse oximeters are "sufficiently safe and accurate for all people," according to the report.
"But advocates still say the FDA, which issued a warning about the issue last year, is moving too slowly," said the report.
The problem raises broader concerns about bias as technology becomes more embedded in health care, and about the government's ability to counteract it through regulation and oversight, it added.
Photos
Related Stories
- Shanghai to conduct mass COVID-19 testing as new cases reported
- Beijing reports 7 new COVID-19 cases
- Hong Kong to distribute 300,000 RAT kits following sewage COVID-19 detection
- Palestine rejects results of U.S. investigation on killing of Al Jazeera journalist
- U.S. city of Philadelphia reports "security incident" during Independence Day fireworks show
Copyright © 2022 People's Daily Online. All Rights Reserved.