Safety made simple.

We have an unwavering commitment to keep our patients safe. But staffing shortages can make it challenging to check on your patients as often as you’d like.

What if you could monitor patients from anywhere in the hospital? Now you can, with the the RespArray™ patient monitor.

It's designed to continuously monitor patients in areas of care where spot checking might not be enough or where additional parameters are needed — for example, in medical-surgical units or for capnography use in procedural sedation. So you can detect respiratory compromise early and intervene sooner.

Patient safety, made easy.

Smart. Connected. Intuitive.

Simplification

The RespArray™ patient monitor features simple connectivity and seamlessly integrates into workflow. So you’ll have more time to focus on your patients.

  • Includes an HL7 interface, is WiFi-enabled, connects to your EMR and VitalSync™ remote patient monitoring system— giving you more visibility, wherever you are.
  • Features a large, intuitive touchscreen you can see from multiple angles and from a distance.
Patient monitoring in-use

96%

On average, medical-surgical registered nurses spend 96% of their shift away from the patient's bedside.1

More information about VitalSync™ remote patient monitoring system

Manage risk — and alarms

Patient Safety

Experience world-class Nellcor™ pulse oximetry and Microstream™ capnography technologies, designed to help you detect respiratory compromise early — and help reduce alarm fatigue.

  • See trends with near real-time monitoring so you can get to your patients sooner.
  • Patient monitor includes SpO2 (Nellcor™ pulse oximetry) and etCO2 (Microstream™ capnography) proprietary algorithms, plus ECG, NiBP, and continuous temperature monitoring.
Patient monitoring in-use

53%

The Smart Alarm for Respiratory Analysis™ (SARA) in Microstream™ technology reduces unneccessary nuisance alarms by 53%.2

More information about MIcrostream™ technology

Continuous monitoring.
Continuous support.

Support

Your dedicated white-glove service team is with you every step of the way. Customizable plans and service options are tailored to fit your needs.

  • Get optimal value with next-level support, education, and training that more effectively reduces adverse events and enables your team to deliver exceptional patient care.
  • Your Medtronic team includes tenured nursing professionals, respiratory therapists, informatics experts, and engineers. They have the background, experience, and knowledge to understand your challenges and optimally implement the monitor within your workflow.
Doctor board meeting

$535K

Average amount that continuous monitoring of high-risk patients may help a median-sized hospital save annually3,†

Download the Solution Delivery Service Brochure

Product Training and Support

Access product guides and manuals, reimbursement information, and additional product support for the RespArray™ patient monitor.

 

The measurements provided through the RespArray™ patient monitor, including Nellcor™, Microstream™, and other vital signs, should not be used as the sole basis for diagnosis or therapy and are intended only as adjuncts to patient assessment.

  • † This assumes a 20% respiratory depression reduction and an annual general care floor volume of 2,447 patients receiving opioids per median-sized hospital. 90% of surgical patients and 45% of medical patients on U.S. general care floors receive opioids. Continuous pulse oximetry and capnography device pricing assumptions used list pricing for the following: a Capnostream™ 35 portable respiratory monitor prorated over 7 years; a Microstream™ capnography filter line, and a disposable Nellcor™ pulse oximetry sensor, resulting in $52.73 in device costs per continuously monitored patient stay on a medical surgical floor. For intermittent pulse oximetry monitoring, device pricing consisted of a multiparameter monitor prorated over 7 years and a reusable pulse oximetry sensor, resulting in $0.68 in device costs per patient stay. Additional information on pricing and assumptions are available in the study publication.

  • 1. Hendrich A, Chow M, Skierczynski B, Lu Z. A 36-hospital time and motion study: how do medical-surgical nurses spend their time? Perm J. 2008; 12(3):25-34.

  • 2. Hockman S, Glembot T, Niebel K. Comparison of capnography derived respiratory rate alarm frequency using the SARA algorithm versus an established non-adaptive respiratory rate alarm management algorithm in bariatric surgical patients. Resp Care. 2009 open forum abstract; December 2009.

  • 3. Khanna A, Junquist C, Buhre W, Soto R, di Piazza F, Saager L. Modeling the cost savings of continuous pulse oximetry and capnography monitoring of United States general care floor patients receiving opioids based on the PRODIGY trial. Adv Ther. 2021 May 24:1–15.