Abstract
The measurement of blood pressure in the physician's office is subject to a number of observer errors and also to the "white-coat effect." Automatic devices that measure blood pressure without a human observer in the room can eliminate many of these problems. We argue for greater use of these devices in the physician's office.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
APA
Vidt, D. G., Lang, R. S., Seballos, R. J., Misra-Hebert, A., Campbell, J., & Bena, J. F. (2010, October). Taking blood pressure: Too important to trust to humans? Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine. https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.77a.09155
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