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Homepage>IEEE Standards>35 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. OFFICE MACHINES>35.240 Applications of information technology>35.240.80 IT applications in health care technology>IEEE 1073.1.1.1-2004 - IEEE Standard for Health Informatics - Point-of-care medical device communication - Part 10101: Nomenclature
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Released: 15.01.2005

IEEE 1073.1.1.1-2004 - IEEE Standard for Health Informatics - Point-of-care medical device communication - Part 10101: Nomenclature

IEEE Standard for Health Informatics - Point-of-care medical device communication - Part 10101: Nomenclature

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Standard number:IEEE 1073.1.1.1-2004
Released:15.01.2005
Pages:504
Status:Active
Language:English
DESCRIPTION

IEEE 1073.1.1.1-2004

The scope of this project is to define a nomenclature for communications of information from point-of-care medical devices. Primary emphasis is placed on acute care medical devices and patient vital signs information. The nomenclature also supports concepts in an object oriented information model that is for medical device communications.

The purpose of this standard is to define the unique terms and concepts required for point-of-care medical device data communication. This document will serve as the data dictionary for present and future medical device data communication applications.

New IEEE Standard - Superseded. Replaced by ISO/IEEE 11073-10101-2004. Within the context of the ISO/IEEE 11073 family of standards for point-of-care (POC) medical device communication (MCD), this standard provides the nomenclature that supports both the domain information model and service model components of the standards family, as well as the semantic content exchanged with medical devices. The nomenclature is specialized for patient vital signs information representation and medical device informatics, with major areas including concepts for electrocardiograph (ECG), haemodynamics, respiration, blood gas, urine, fluid-related metrics, and neurology, as well as specialized units of measurement, general device events, alarms, and body sites. The standard defines both the architecture and major components of the nomenclature, along with extensive definitions for each conceptual area.