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What is the best way to take your blood pressure to get the most accurate results?

I keep hearing differing methods!! I'd like to know how I'm suppose to sit?

To be clear: I am taking my own blood pressure & was urged to do so & keep track on the advice of my doctor.

Which is a myth?:

  • Can't have eaten/drank anything for the last half hour
  • feet flat on the floor
  • lying down but sitting up
  • back against the chair
  • don't cross your legs/ankles
  • only use your left arm
  • hand facing upward
  • hand facing downward
  • keep your arm down
  • keep your arm raised to the level of your chest/heart

What's the correct way????

Anything else I should know? I keep getting inconsistent results, and it's stressing me out.

Thank you.

13 comments
  • I'm a GP, here's my opinion

    Can't have eaten/drank anything for the last half hour

    • in principle could alter your BP but I wouldn't worry too much unless it's quite a large meal

    Feet flat on the floor

    • yes, this is important

    Lying down but sitting up

    • for some purposes docs want lying/sitting/standing but for home measurements do them sitting

    Back against the chair

    • yes

    Don't cross your legs/ankles

    • yes, feet flat on the floor

    Only use your left arm

    • myth, if there is a significant difference between your left and right arms there is something funky going on with your subclavian arteries

    Hand facing upward/downward

    • not super important

    Keep your arm down/raised

    • keep your arm relaxed, ideally resting on a table or desk at close to 90deg or hanging straight down

    Most important is be relaxed, sit still, don't move your arm, if you get a high reading calm yourself and take it once more then leave it.

    When I'm taking a BP in clinic the most important thing I do most of the time is distract the patient from the machine with some patter as for most people the biggest confounding factor is stressing about what the reading will be, I don't correct posture etc unless they are substantially moving their arm around.

  • Due to medical issues, my mother has had several doctor visits the last couple years and part of that was monitoring blood pressure. The only items you listed that was mentioned to her was to have feet flat on the floor and legs not crossed. For everything else, as someone else said, I think it's more important that you're consistent, e.g. either keep your arm down or raised every time. Obligatory iana dr., this is not medical advice.

  • If you have a blood pressure measuring device, follow the directions.

    To ensure it is accurate, take it to a medical professional and ask them if they will help to verify the accurracy or what they advise. One person I know did this and the nurse they saw took the pressure a few times with their cuff, had the person run the machine a few times, and told them how to position themselves for consistency. The nurse was able to confirm the device was a couple digits off but otherwise consistent and gave them person the ranges they should worry about when using the machine.

    The nurse also noted that a precise value is not super important, just whether it is outside a safe range or has large changes in a short period of time because blood pressure changes constantly. Taking it the same way each time is the most important thing to help notice changes over time.

  • Sit for a few minutes first. Getting up/down will alter it for a few mins

    Also, don’t buy a cheap monitor. I’ve used a cheap CVS one that gave different readings 10 times in a row.

  • Extra info you didn't ask for but might help: the doctor gave me a sheet to record my BP for a week. Two readings in the morning, a few minutes apart, two readings in the afternoon, a few minutes apart. Once I'd done that he added and divided the results to get the average. Too high, so now I'm on meds.

    I was a bit blasé about it at first - pfft, I feel fine! But he explained that high BP can cause a stroke. You can recover just fine from a heart attack, but a stroke can be devastating, if you even survive it. You will feel absolutely fine until suddenly you're on the floor, unable to move one side of your body or speak coherently. Scared me into taking it seriously!

13 comments