News

Medtronic's separation of its Medtronic Diabetes unit into a publicly traded company named MiniMed will be a new beginning ...
Although the company's advancements have influenced contemporary healthcare, its stock presents a more cautious narrative ...
Medtronic announced a spin-off of its diabetes business in May, which will be completed in 2026. Read more on MDT stock here.
Medtronic is expanding a recall of two of its MiniMed 600 series insulin pumps after reports found several had broken retainer rings cracked, resulting in insulin doses that were too high or too low.
Medtronic has issued an urgent medical device correction letter warning users of the MiniMed 600 and 700 series of insulin pumps of an increased risk for shorter-than-expected battery life ...
WASHINGTON (7News) — Medtronic has recalled its MiniMed™ 600 Series Insulin Pumps after it was discovered that defect was leading to incorrect dosing of insulin, which is used to regulate ...
Medtronic has recalled certain MiniMed 600 Series insulin pumps for delivering incorrect insulin dosing due to a missing or broken retainer ring, which helps lock the insulin cartridge in place in ...
Medtronic MiniMed insulin pumps are being recalled due to an issue that can lead to incorrect dosing. The affected pumps include the MiniMed 630G and MiniMed 670G. The recall affects 322,055 devices.
The MiniMed 780G system has been cleared in Europe since 2020. Medtronic submitted it to the FDA for U.S. approval in the spring of 2021 but is still awaiting a decision, slowed down by the ...
Customers in the U.S. can call 1-800-378-2292 for support. Medtronic expects MiniMed pumps to typically have up to a 10-hour buffer between a low-battery alert and a device shutdown, the FDA said.
Medtronic has expanded a 2018 recall of remote controllers used with some of its insulin pumps. The recall now includes 31,310 remote controllers used with either the MiniMed 508 insulin pump or ...
Medtronic recently received FDA approval for its MiniMed 780G system, which is an insulin pump that automatically adjusts and corrects type 1 diabetes patients’ glucose levels every five minutes.