Recognized clinical applications, safety requirements, professional supervision, and medical-grade chamber environments.
A small number of conditions are recognized by hyperbaric medicine organizations as appropriate for clinical hyperbaric oxygen therapy. These are physician-directed treatments delivered in a supervised medical setting — not something to self-select from a product page.
Recognized clinical uses include things like selected wound-care applications, acute thermal burn injury as an adjunctive treatment, radiation tissue injury, and certain infections and emergency indications, among others. Whether any of these applies to a specific patient is a medical decision made by a treating physician, not a determination we can make here.
Clinical HBOT is typically delivered in hospital or specialty-clinic chambers at pressures and protocols specific to the condition being treated, with medical staff present. Home wellness chambers are a different category of product, intended for personal wellness use, and are not equivalent to hospital-grade clinical equipment.
You may see hyperbaric oxygen discussed online for conditions that are not among the recognized clinical indications. Where that's the case, we think it's important to be direct about it rather than imply otherwise. If you're researching HBOT for a specific diagnosis not listed here, ask your physician what the current evidence actually supports.
If you believe a recognized clinical application may be relevant to your situation, the right first step is a referral or conversation with your physician or a hyperbaric medicine specialist — not a purchase. Once your medical care is in place, our team can separately support facilities and practices on the equipment side.