In a suit filed against CVS, Walgreens, GE Healthcare and many other medical technology companies and sellers of pulse oximeters – devices that use light to measure oxygen saturation in the blood – Medtronic has been dismissed, the company said in a statement Monday. Meanwhile, the U.S.

Food and Drug Administration has been working to update its 2013 guidance on pulse oximetry submissions; publication and public comment have been pushed to fiscal year 2025. WHY IT MATTERS Medtronic, a medical device and technology company, was one of many defendants named in a lawsuit the Roots Community Health Center filed in Alameda County Superior Court last year. Slammed during the COVID-19 epidemic, when the death rate among Black Americans was disproportionately high, Roots said in its announcement about the lawsuit that it had relied on pulse oximeters in its decisions to provide oxygen therapy to the swelling lines of patients coming to it for medical care.

Roots asked the court to halt sales of "unreliable pulse oximeters or require manufacturers and distributors of the flawed devices to warn purchasers of their products’ dangerous shortcomings." "At least one of Medtronic/Covidien’s pulse oximeters that is cleared by the FDA notes in the manual that accompanies the pulse oximeter that dark skin pigment can cause inaccurate measurements," Roots said in the filing . "The manual does not explain that measurements in people with darker skin are skewed towards showing that people.