Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.

BS EN ISO/IEEE 11073-10407:2022 – TC:2023 Edition

$280.87

Tracked Changes. Health informatics. Device interoperability – Personal health device communication. Device specialization. Blood pressure monitor

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2023 182
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Categories: ,

If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to our online customer service team by clicking on the bottom right corner. We’re here to assist you 24/7.
Email:[email protected]

Within the context of the ISO/IEEE 11073 family of standards for device communication, this document establishes a normative definition of communication between personal telehealth blood pressure monitor devices and compute engines (e.g., cell phones, personal computers, personal health appliances, and set top boxes) in a manner that enables plug-and-play interoperability. It leverages appropriate portions of existing standards including ISO/IEEE 11073 terminology, information models, application profile standards, and transport standards. It specifies the use of specific term codes, formats, and behaviors in telehealth environments restricting optionality in base frameworks in favor of interoperability. This document defines a common core of communication functionality for personal telehealth blood pressure monitors.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
1 30468351
107 A-30456909
108 undefined
110 European foreword
Endorsement notice
112 Blank Page
115 Notice and Disclaimer of Liability Concerning the Use of IEEE Standards Documents
116 Translations
Official statements
Comments on standards
Laws and regulations
Copyrights
117 Photocopies
Updating of IEEE Standards documents
Errata
Patents
124 1. Overview
1.1 Scope
1.2 Purpose
1.3 Word usage
125 1.4 Context
2. Normative references
126 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations
3.1 Definitions
127 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations
4. Introduction to ISO/IEEE 11073 personal health devices
4.1 General
128 4.2 Introduction to IEEE 11073-20601 modeling constructs
4.2.1 General
4.2.2 Domain information model
4.2.3 Service model
4.2.4 Communication model
4.2.5 Implementing the models
129 4.3 Compliance with other standards
5. Blood pressure monitor device concepts and modalities
5.1 General
130 5.2 Systolic and diastolic pressure
5.3 Mean arterial pressure
5.4 Pulse rate
5.5 Blood pressure measurement status
6. Blood pressure monitor domain information model
6.1 Overview
6.2 Class extensions
6.3 Object instance diagram
132 6.4 Types of configuration
6.4.1 General
6.4.2 Standard configuration
6.4.3 Extended configuration
6.5 Medical device system object
6.5.1 MDS object attributes
134 6.5.2 MDS object methods
135 6.5.3 MDS object events
136 6.5.4 Other MDS services
6.5.4.1 GET service
6.5.4.2 SET service
137 6.6 Numeric objects
6.6.1 General
6.6.2 Blood pressure measurement
142 6.6.3 Pulse rate
6.7 Real-time sample array objects
146 6.8 Enumeration objects
6.8.1 General
6.8.2 Blood pressure measurement status
147 6.9 PM-store objects
6.10 Scanner objects
148 6.11 Class extension objects
6.12 Blood pressure monitor information model extensibility rules
7. Blood pressure monitor service model
7.1 General
7.2 Object access services
150 7.3 Object access event report services
8. Blood pressure monitor communication model
8.1 Overview
8.2 Communication characteristics
151 8.3 Association procedure
8.3.1 General
8.3.2 Agent procedure—association request
153 8.4 Configuring procedure
8.4.1 General
8.4.2 Blood pressure monitor—standard configuration
8.4.2.1 Agent procedure
154 8.4.2.2 Manager procedure
155 8.5 Operating procedure
8.5.1 General
8.5.2 GET blood pressure monitor MDS attributes
8.5.3 Measurement data transmission
8.6 Time synchronization
156 9. Test associations
9.1 General
9.2 Behavior with standard configuration
9.3 Behavior with extended configurations
10. Conformance
10.1 Applicability
157 Annex A (informative) Bibliography
158 10.4.2 General implementation conformance statement
160 10.4.3 DIM MOC implementation conformance statement
10.4.4 MOC attribute implementation conformance statement
161 10.4.5 MOC notification implementation conformance statement
162 10.4.6 MOC nomenclature conformance statement
163 Annex A (informative) Bibliography
164 Annex B (normative) Additional ASN.1 definitions
B.1 Device and sensor status bit mapping
165 Annex C (normative) Allocation of identifiers
167 Annex D (informative) Message sequence examples
a) When the user connects the blood pressure monitor, the manager does not recognize the agent’s configuration and sends a response to the agent’s association request with the result accepted-unknown-config. See E.2.2.2 and E.2.2.3 for the correspondi…
b) As a consequence of this, the agent negotiates its configuration information to the manager. After getting confirmation from the manager accepting the agent’s configuration, the agent device is ready to send measurements. Both devices enter the Ope…
c) Subsequently, the manager may request the MDS object attributes of the agent by sending a data message with the “Remote Operation Invoke | Get” command. As a response, the agent reports its MDS object attributes to the manager using a data message …
d) As a next step, the user of the agent device takes a single measurement. The measurement data are transmitted to the manager using a confirmed event report. After having successfully received the measurement data, the manager sends a confirmation t…
e) The user ends the measurement session (e.g., by pushing a proper button on the device or just by not using the device for duration longer than a certain time period). As a consequence, the agent disassociates from the manager by sending an associat…
f) When the agent requests to associate to the manager for the next measurement session (e.g., the next day), the result in the manager’s response is accepted, as it already knows the agent’s configuration from the previous measurement session. Both d…
g) Finally, the last two steps shown are similar as in item d) and item e). The user takes a single confirmed measurement followed by releasing the association.
169 Annex E (informative) Protocol data unit examples
E.1 General
E.2 Association information exchange
E.2.1 General
E.2.2 Extended configuration
E.2.2.1 General
E.2.2.2 Association request
170 E.2.2.3 Association response
E.2.3 Previously known extended configuration
E.2.3.1 General
E.2.3.2 Association request
171 E.2.3.3 Association response
E.2.4 Standard configuration
E.2.4.1 General
E.2.4.2 Association request
172 E.2.4.3 Association response
E.3 Configuration information exchange
E.3.1 General
E.3.2 Extended configuration
E.3.2.1 General
173 E.3.2.2 Remote operation invoke event report configuration
174 E.3.2.3 Remote operation response event report configuration
E.3.3 Known configuration
E.3.3.1 General
175 E.3.3.2 Remote operation invoke event report configuration
E.3.3.3 Remote operation response event report configuration
E.3.4 Standard configuration
E.3.4.1 General
E.3.4.2 Remote operation invoke event report configuration
E.3.4.3 Remote operation response event report configuration
E.4 GET MDS attributes service
E.4.1 General
E.4.2 Get all medical device system attributes request
176 E.4.3 Get response with all MDS attributes
177 E.5 Data reporting
E.5.1 Confirmed measurement data transmission
178 E.5.2 Response to confirmed measurement data transmission
E.6 Disassociation
E.6.1 Association release request
E.6.2 Association release response
179 Annex F (informative) Revision history
BS EN ISO/IEEE 11073-10407:2022 - TC
$280.87