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IEEE 11073-10419-2019

$91.54

ISO/IEEE International Standard – Health informatics–Personal health device communication – Part 10419: Device Specialization–Insulin Pump

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
IEEE 2019 134
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– Active. Within the context of the ISO/IEEE 11073 family of standards for device communication, a normative definition of communication between personal telehealth insulin pump devices and compute engines (e.g., cell phones, personal computers, personal health appliances, set top boxes), in a manner that enables plug-and-play interoperability, is established in this standard. 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. The standard defines a common core of communication functionality for personal telehealth insulin pump devices.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
5 Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents
8 Participants
11 Introduction
12 Contents
14 1. Overview
1.1 Scope
1.2 Purpose
1.3 Context
15 2. Normative references
3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations
3.1 Definitions
17 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations
18 4. Introduction to ISO/IEEE 11073 personal health devices (PHDs)
4.1 General
4.2 Introduction to ISO/IEEE 11073-20601 modeling constructs
19 4.3 Compliance with other standards
5. Insulin pump device concepts and modalities
5.1 General
20 5.2 Device types
21 5.3 Collected data
26 5.4 Stored data
5.5 Scheduled data
6. Insulin pump domain information model (DIM)
6.1 Overview
6.2 Class extensions
27 6.3 Object instance diagram
28 6.4 Types of configuration
29 6.5 Profiles
6.6 MDS object
6.6.1 MDS object attributes
30 6.6.2 MDS object methods
31 6.6.3 MDS object events
32 6.6.4 Other MDS services
6.6.4.1 GET service
6.6.4.2 SET service
6.7 Numeric objects
6.7.1 General
6.7.2 Current bolus setting
34 6.7.3 Pending bolus delay
35 6.7.4 Bolus delivered
38 6.7.5 Current basal rate setting
41 6.7.6 Basal delivered
42 6.7.7 Basal rate schedule setting
43 6.7.8 I:CHO schedule setting
44 6.7.9 ISF schedule setting
45 6.7.10 Insulin reservoir remaining
46 6.7.11 Insulin concentration
47 6.8 Real-time sample array objects
48 6.9 Enumeration objects
6.9.1 General
6.9.2 Operational status
50 6.9.3 PHD DM status
51 6.9.4 Insulin pump status
53 6.10 PM-store objects
6.10.1 General
54 6.10.2 Persistent store model
55 6.10.3 Metric results PM-store object attributes
56 6.10.4 PM-store object methods
6.10.4.1 Clear-Segments
6.10.5 PM-store object events
57 6.10.6 PM-store object services
6.10.6.1 GET service
6.10.6.2 SET service
6.10.7 PM-segment objects
58 6.11 Schedule-store objects
6.11.1 General
6.11.2 Schedule-store model
6.11.3 Basal profile settings schedule-store object attributes
60 6.11.4 I:CHO profile settings schedule-store object attributes
62 6.11.5 ISF profiles schedule-store object attributes
64 6.11.6 Schedule-store object methods
65 6.11.7 Schedule-store object events
6.11.8 Schedule-store object services
6.11.8.1 GET service
66 6.11.8.2 SET service
6.11.9 Schedule-segment objects
67 6.12 Scanner objects
6.13 Class extension objects
6.14 Insulin pump information model extensibility rules
7. Insulin pump service model
7.1 General
7.2 Object access services
71 7.3 Object access event report services
8. Insulin pump communication model
8.1 Overview
8.2 Communications characteristics
72 8.3 Association procedure
73 8.4 Configuring procedure
75 8.5 Operating procedure
76 8.6 Time synchronization
9. Test associations
9.1 Behavior with standard configuration
9.2 Behavior with extended configurations
10. Conformance
10.1 Applicability
77 10.2 Conformance specification
10.3 Levels of conformance
78 10.4 Implementation conformance statements (ICSs)
83 Annex A (informative) Bibliography
84 Annex B (normative) Any additional ASN.1 definitions
B.1 Device status and insulin pump status bit mapping
85 B.2 Capability-mask
86 B.3 State-flag
88 Annex C (normative) Allocation of identifiers
C.1 General
C.2 Definitions of terms and codes
90 C.3 Systematic derivations of terms and codes
99 Annex D (informative) Message sequence examples
101 Annex E (normative) Schedule-store class
E.1 Schedule-store class
105 E.2 Schedule-segment class
109 Annex F (normative) Schedule class ASN.1 definitions
F.1 ACTION-method-related data types
F.2 Data types for new object attributes and object services
112 F.3 Data protocol definitions
113 Annex G (informative) The schedule-store concept
G.1 General
114 G.2 Schedule-store object hierarchy
117 Annex H (informative) Scedule communication model
H.1 Operating procedure
121 Annex I (informative) Protocol data unit (PDU) examples
I.1 General
I.2 Association information exchange
124 I.3 Configuration information exchange
128 I.4 GET MDS attributes service
130 I.5 Data reporting
I.6 Disassociation
131 Annex J (informative) Revision history
IEEE 11073-10419-2019
$91.54