Clinicians working across mixed patient populations
Veinlite LED+®
A versatile transillumination tool for difficult peripheral IV access, venipuncture support, and everyday clinical confidence.
This Nurses Week, save up to $100 on handheld vein finders built to support difficult access, pediatric care, and everyday clinical confidence.

Featured: LED+ is $459 during Nurses Week, with PEDI2 and NEO also on sale.
Clinicians working across mixed patient populations
A versatile transillumination tool for difficult peripheral IV access, venipuncture support, and everyday clinical confidence.
Pediatric units and clinicians caring for children
Sized and designed for pediatric use, with a compact format that supports careful assessment before the first stick.
NICU, neonatal teams, and newborn access needs
Built for neonatal and small-patient access workflows, with multiple light modes for clinical assessment.
Veinlite devices use transillumination to help clinicians identify and assess veins before access attempts. The goal is practical support at the bedside: portable, fast to deploy, and appropriate across everyday difficult-access scenarios.
This sale page keeps the offer clear while supporting it with the proof points clinical purchasers expect: FDA-registered devices, international use, and direct paths to clinical-trial and model-comparison resources.
| Device | Best fit | Regular | Nurses Week | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Veinlite LED+® | Mixed patient populations, IV access, dental and clinical use | $559 | $459 | $100 |
| Veinlite PEDI2® | Pediatric patients and child-focused access workflows | $249 | $199 | $50 |
| Veinlite NEO® | Neonatal and small-patient access workflows | $299 | $249 | $50 |
Keep LED+, LEDX, and compatible devices ready between shifts.
Shop power accessories →Help a nurse manager or purchaser choose the right device before ordering.
Compare models →Save on LED+, PEDI2, and NEO while sale pricing is active.
Shop Nurses Week SaleSale valid May 6–12, 2026, while supplies last. Pricing shown in USD. Device selection should be based on clinical setting and intended use.