Update: This popular deal is still available.
Sleeplay has
Resmed AirSense 11 AutoSet CPAP Machine w/ Heated Humidifier & SlimLine Tubing for $1,004 - $505 w/ discount code
HOLIDAY at checkout =
$499.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
divinebaboon for finding this deal.
- Note: You may uncheck Free Returns & Package Protection at checkout.
Features:- Whisper-Quiet Operation: The machine operates at only 27 decibels, ensuring a peaceful sleep environment for both the user and their partner.
- Smart and Personalized Comfort: The integrated heated humidifier with Climate Control Auto prevents dryness and rainout. The "AutoSet for Her" mode also caters to the unique needs of women with sleep apnea, providing gentler pressure adjustments.
- User-Friendly Design: A large touchscreen interface, voice-guided setup, and a simple start/stop button make the machine intuitive to operate.
- Advanced Data Tracking: The myAir app provides personalized feedback, detailed sleep data, and troubleshooting support, empowering users to manage their therapy effectively.
- Automatic Pressure Adjustment: The AutoSet technology ensures optimal pressure levels throughout the night, adapting to the user's breathing patterns and maximizing therapy effectiveness.
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you mustenter the Clinical Menu by pressing and holding the "My Options" and "My Sleep View" buttons for 3 seconds until the screen turns white, then go to Settings to adjust the Mode (CPAP or AutoSet) and the Set Pressure/Pressure Range
And then you can also find out your optimal pressure settings by putting a sd card into the device, record data for a week, upload the data to sleephq, have it generate a report, then send the report to chatgpt or gemini and ask it to recommend cpap pressure range.
just exit out of the pop up, the unlock deal button is still gonna be on the home page even if you choose to ignore their pop up asking you for info
and then when i tried the code HOLIDAY without clicking the unlock deal button, my price is $639 sometimes, and 499 other times, it's weird
So I think clicking on the "unlock deal" button is my preferred way to get the discount
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the 10 has rotating angled air hose in the back which you can rotate it 360 degrees while the 11 is straight out. Also there are alot of reports the 11 has faulty humidifer reservoir when filling it up because it cant be filled up to line or it will leak. Just google 10 vs 11 and you see all the complains
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Between my insurance and the DME provider, it took over 4 months after I was diagnosed with OSA last year and marked as "CPAP-dependent" for them to finally actually get a machine in my hands.
At the three-month point of waiting (with SPO2 dropping into the 70s every night), I had given up on them getting their act together, and just bought an Airmini out of pocket, reasoning that when I did eventually get my machine through them, having the Airmini would still be useful, while having two Airsense 11's, not so much.
Had this deal been available back when I bought the Airmini, though, I would have just bought them both, then and there.
When I first got my CPAP machine, I bought and tried out every mask Resmed makes (as well as several from Philips-Respironics). I had the same thing happen - most people do. Mine is configured to 12-20 auto-set, so, depending on the night, I'm dealing with anywhere from a 20% more to twice the pressure they are.
When you start out, your body just isn't used to the increased pressure, doesn't quite know what to do, and will periodically try to relieve it through the mouth. Over time, your body just gets used to it. The full-face masks won't do all that much to help in my experience, because they are still designed to funnel air in through your nose, and their expiratory vents are on the front. They can even out the pressure differential between the nose and mouth a little, but it wasn't close to enough to stop the effect for me, and every time you end up opening your mouth from the pressure, the mask usually ends up getting repositioned slightly, starts leaking as a result, and then requires you to adjust it, which gets old really fast if you need to do it every couple minutes.
What ended up helping me the most was getting a chin strap - an elastic cloth thing that wraps over your head and under your chin, basically acting like a rubber band that helps to keep your mouth closed. You can also set the rate at which the pressure builds up to your required level after you put on the mask. You can slow the rate down a bit, which can give your body time to adjust to the increasing pressure, rather than suddenly being hit with the max all at once.
Having to suddenly use a CPAP is a big change, and it takes time to adjust to it, including all the weird little peculiarities no one ever tells you about. But it definitely beats having significant stress put on your cardiovascular system every night as it struggles in vain to deliver enough oxygen throughout your body, and slowly but consistently damaging your brain.
I make enough where going to single payer would cost me more in taxes than I'd save in healthcare costs, but I don't care. Just get rid of this giant leech that makes it harder than it should be to receive healthcare. Can't wait until they repeal the part of Obamacare that eliminates lifetime maximums or bans denials due to preexisting conditions.
So, your solution is, what?
To have people already unlucky enough to end up with severe, expensive health conditions to just forgo medical treatment, because insurance companies either deny them coverage, or, even under insurance, they've been forced to spend every last cent they had? So they can then just go die homeless in a gutter somewhere?
The whole point of health insurance is a social contract: you pay, whether you're healthy or not, so that, when your body decides to fall apart, you don't have to go die in a gutter. If you allow insurance providers to withhold coverage from those who really need it, that defeats the purpose. And you'll just end up very, very unhappy when you eventually end up as one of them.
The only ones that benefit from that are the bottom lines of the insurance companies. Insurance was still more expensive overall, not less, before Obamacare. Those companies are for-profit entities, they aren't going to start lowering prices when the alternative is an increased profit margin.
Just get an insurance plan that actually meets your medical needs, rather than throwing money out the window with a high-deductible, restrictive coverage plan that has a lower fixed monthly cost, but a massively higher total cost.
If what your employer offers is really so terrible, as long as you can demonstrate it, you qualify for ACA marketplace plans, and, even with the significant increase in premiums thanks to the subsidy cut, they are still a decent proposition - because of my income bracket, I get to pay full price for mine, regardless of whether the subsidies would have been extended, and it still sounds like a much better deal than whatever you have.
High deductible plans are for young, healthy gamblers willing to go all-in on the bet that they won't ever need to make use of them. Very profitable for insurance companies, since they get paid while barely having to provide anything. Nice and cheap for the insured, right up until the inevitable 'told ya so' moment eventually comes around, and they realize their insurance company covers exactly what they paid for.
So, your solution is, what?
To have people already unlucky enough to end up with severe, expensive health conditions to just forgo medical treatment, because insurance companies either deny them coverage, or, even under insurance, they've been forced to spend every last cent they had? So they can then just go die homeless in a gutter somewhere?
The whole point of health insurance is a social contract: you pay, whether you're healthy or not, so that, when your body decides to fall apart, you don't have to go die in a gutter. If you allow insurance providers to withhold coverage from those who really need it, that defeats the purpose. And you'll just end up very, very unhappy when you eventually end up as one of them.
The only ones that benefit from that are the bottom lines of the insurance companies. Insurance was still more expensive overall, not less, before Obamacare. Those companies are for-profit entities, they aren't going to start lowering prices when the alternative is an increased profit margin.
Just get an insurance plan that actually meets your medical needs, rather than throwing money out the window with a high-deductible, restrictive coverage plan that has a lower fixed monthly cost, but a massively higher total cost.
If what your employer offers is really so terrible, as long as you can demonstrate it, you qualify for ACA marketplace plans, and, even with the significant increase in premiums thanks to the subsidy cut, they are still a decent proposition - because of my income bracket, I get to pay full price for mine, regardless of whether the subsidies would have been extended, and it still sounds like a much better deal than whatever you have.
High deductible plans are for young, healthy gamblers willing to go all-in on the bet that they won't ever need to make use of them. Very profitable for insurance companies, since they get paid while barely having to provide anything. Nice and cheap for the insured, right up until the inevitable 'told ya so' moment eventually comes around, and they realize their insurance company covers exactly what they paid for.
Also, high deductible is the best plan offered by my employer when you run the math because they don't subsidize all the plans equally. I could do a HMO, but my premiums are significantly higher. I basically consider my deductible as a guaranteed healthcare expense, and it still works out cheaper than going onto the healthcare marketplace or going HMO. I just ran the numbers on Covered California for myself, and the cheapest Bronze 60 plan is almost $1k/mo, lol.
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