IEEE ISO 11073 10420 2010
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IEEE Health informatics — Personal health device communication Part 10420: Device specialization — Body composition analyzer
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2010 | 62 |
New IEEE Standard – Active. Within the context of the ISO/IEEE 11073 family of standards for device communication, this standard establishes a normative definition of the communication between personal body composition analyzing devices and managers (e.g., cell phones, personal computers, personal health appliances, set top boxes) in a manner that enables plug-and-play interoperability. It leverages appropriate portions of existing standards including ISO/IEEE 11073 terminology and IEEE 11073-20601(TM) information models. It specifies the use of specific term codes, formats, and behaviors in telehealth environments restricting optionality in base frameworks in favor of interoperability. This standard defines a common core of communication functionality for personal telehealth body composition analyzer devices. In this context, body composition analyzer devices are being used broadly to cover body composition analyzer devices that measure body impedances, and compute the various body components including body fat from the impedance.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std 11073-10420™-2010 front cover |
3 | Title page |
6 | Introduction Notice to users Laws and regulations Copyrights Updating of IEEE documents |
7 | Errata Interpretations Patents |
8 | Participants |
11 | Contents |
13 | Important Notice 1. Overview 1.1 Scope |
14 | 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Context 2. Normative references |
15 | 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 3.1 Definitions |
16 | 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations 4. Introduction to ISO/IEEE 11073 personal health devices 4.1 General 4.2 Introduction to IEEE 11073-20601 modeling constructs 4.2.1 General |
17 | 4.2.2 Domain information model 4.2.3 Service model 4.2.4 Communication model 4.2.5 Implementing the models 5. Body composition analyzer device concepts and modalities 5.1 General |
18 | 5.2 Body fat 5.3 Body height 5.4 Body weight 5.5 Body mass index 5.6 Fat free mass 5.7 Soft lean mass 5.8 Body water |
19 | 6. Body composition analyzer domain information model 6.1 Overview 6.2 Class extensions 6.3 Object instance diagram |
20 | 6.4 Types of configuration 6.4.1 General 6.4.2 Standard configuration |
21 | 6.4.3 Extended configuration 6.5 Medical device system object 6.5.1 MDS object attributes |
22 | 6.5.2 MDS object methods 6.5.3 MDS object events |
24 | 6.5.4 Other MDS services 6.6 Numeric objects 6.6.1 General |
25 | 6.6.2 Body fat |
26 | 6.6.3 Body height |
28 | 6.6.4 Body weight 6.6.5 Body mass index 6.6.6 Fat free mass |
29 | 6.6.7 Soft lean mass |
30 | 6.6.8 Body water |
31 | 6.7 Real-time sample array objects 6.8 Enumeration objects |
32 | 6.9 PM-store objects 6.10 Scanner objects 6.11 Class extension objects 6.12 Body composition analyzer information model extensibility rules 7. Body composition analyzer service model 7.1 General 7.2 Object access services |
33 | 7.3 Object access event report services |
34 | 8. Body composition analyzer communication model 8.1 Overview 8.2 Communications characteristics 8.3 Association procedure 8.3.1 General |
35 | 8.3.2 Agent procedure—association request 8.3.3 Manager procedure—association response |
36 | 8.4 Configuring procedure 8.4.1 General 8.4.2 Body composition analyzer—standard configuration |
38 | 8.5 Operating procedure 8.5.1 General 8.5.2 GET body composition analyzer MDS attributes |
39 | 8.5.3 Measurement data transmission 8.6 Time synchronization 9. Test associations 9.1 Behavior with standard configuration |
40 | 9.2 Behavior with extended configurations 10. Conformance 10.1 Applicability 10.2 Conformance specification 10.3 Levels of conformance 10.3.1 General 10.3.2 Conformance level 1: Base conformance |
41 | 10.3.3 Conformance level 2: Extended nomenclature (ASN.1 and/or ISO/IEEE 11073-10101) 10.4 Implementation conformance statements 10.4.1 General format 10.4.2 General implementation conformance statement |
43 | 10.4.3 DIM MOC implementation conformance statement 10.4.4 MOC attribute ICS |
44 | 10.4.5 MOC notification implementation conformance statement |
45 | 10.4.6 MOC nomenclature conformance statement |
46 | Annex A (informative) Bibliography |
47 | Annex B (normative) Any additional ASN.1 definitions |
48 | Annex C (normative) Allocation of identifiers |
49 | Annex D (informative) Message sequence examples |
51 | 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 |
52 | E.2.2.3 Association response E.2.3.1 General E.2.3.2 Association request |
53 | E.2.3.3 Association response E.2.4 Standard configuration E.2.4.1 General E.2.4.2 Association request |
54 | E.2.4.3 Association response E.3 Configuration information exchange E.3.1 General |
55 | E.3.2 Extended configuration E.3.2.1 General E.3.2.2 Remote operation invoke event report configuration |
58 | E.3.2.3 Remote operation response event report configuration E.3.3 Known configuration E.3.3.1 General E.3.3.2 Remote operation invoke event report configuration E.3.3.3 Remote operation response event report configuration |
59 | 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 |
60 | E.5 Data reporting E.5.1 Confirmed measurement data transmission |
61 | E.5.2 Response to confirmed measurement data transmission E.6 Disassociation E.6.1 Association release request |
62 | E.6.2 Association release response |