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  1. Contact NHS 111 or your GP if you have one or more of the following symptoms. Tell the person you speak to you might have coronavirus. You slowly start feeling more unwell or more breathless. You are finding it hard to breathe when you get up. The pulse oximeter shows your blood oxygen level is 94 or 93 or keeps being lower than normal. %SpO2 ...

  2. Apr 26, 2023 · Breathlessness is a subjective, distressing sensation of awareness of difficulty in breathing. Breathlessness is associated with high healthcare use, accounting for 5% of presentations to the emergency department (1, 2), approximately 4% of GP consultations (3) and reported by patients in 12% of medical admissions (4).

  3. Count the respiratory rate. The normal rate is 12–20 breaths min-1. A high (> 25 min-1) or increasing respiratory rate is a marker of illness and a warning that the patient may deteriorate suddenly. Assess the depth of each breath, the pattern (rhythm) of respiration and whether chest expansion is equal on both sides.

  4. Last revised in July 2024. Perform an initial Airway, Breathing, Circulation assessment, and determine the need for emergency admission. Assess the person's blood pressure, pulse rate, respiratory rate, temperature, level of consciousness, and oxygen saturation. Note: vital signs may be normal even if there is a life-threatening underlying ...

  5. At rest, a normal breathing rate is approximately between 12-16 breaths per minute. The main muscle used for breathing is the diaphragm. The main muscle used for breathing is the diaphragm. When you breathe in (inspiration), the diaphragm contracts and flattens, creating space for the air to flow through the airways and into the lungs.

  6. A pulse oximeter helps you monitor how fast your heart is beating and the level of oxygen in your blood. Blood oxygen level is the most accurate way of keeping an eye on your progress with COVID-19. An ideal blood oxygen level is between 95% and 100%. An ideal heart rate is between 50 and 90 beats per minute (bpm).

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  8. The mean difference for average respiratory rate between RespiraSense and ECG was less than 1 beat per minute (bpm), mean (SD) was -0.41 (1.79). The 95% confidence interval for the difference in average was -3.9 to 3.1, which did not exclude the clinically relevant difference of 3 bpm. The difference was greater than 3 bpm for 9 intervals (7.8%).

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