IEEE 11073 10425 2014
$61.75
Health informatics–Personal health device communication – Part 10425: Device Specialization–Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM)
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2014 | 80 |
New IEEE Standard – Active. Within the context of the ISO/IEEE 11073 family of standards for device communication, a normative definition of the communication between continuous glucose monitor (CGM) devices and managers (e.g., cell phones, personal computers, personal health appliances, and 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 and 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 of CGM devices. In this context, CGM refers to the measurement of the level of glucose in the body on a regular (typically 5 minute) basis through a sensor continuously attached to the person.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std 11073-10425-2014 Front cover |
3 | Title page |
5 | Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents |
8 | Participants |
12 | Introduction |
13 | Contents |
15 | IMPORTANT NOTICE 1. Overview 1.1 Scope 1.2 Purpose |
16 | 1.3 Context 2. Normative references 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 3.1 Definitions |
17 | 3.1 Acronyms and abbreviations |
18 | 4. Introduction to IEEE 11073™ personal health devices 4.1 General 4.2 Introduction to IEEE 11073-20601 modeling constructs |
19 | 4.3 Compliance with other standards 5. Glucose monitoring concepts and modalities 5.1 General |
21 | 5.2 Device types 5.3 CGM Agent to manager communication |
22 | 5.4 Collected data |
24 | 5.5 Stored data 6. Continuous glucose monitor domain information model 6.1 Overview 6.2 Class extensions 6.3 Object instance diagram |
25 | 6.4 Types of configuration |
26 | 6.5 Profiles 6.6 Medical device system object |
30 | 6.7 Numeric objects |
39 | 6.8 Real-time sample array objects 6.9 Enumeration objects |
43 | 6.10 PM-store objects |
47 | 6.11 Scanner objects 6.12 Class extension objects 6.13 CGM information model extensibility rules |
48 | 7. Continuous glucose monitor service model 7.1 General 7.2 Object access services |
49 | 7.3 Object access event report services |
50 | 8. Continuous glucose monitor communication model 8.1 Overview 8.2 Communication characteristics |
51 | 8.3 Association procedure |
52 | 8.4 Configuring procedure |
54 | 8.5 Operating procedure 8.6 Time synchronization 9. Test associations |
55 | 9.1 Behavior with standard configuration 9.2 Behavior with extended configurations 10. Conformance 10.1 Applicability 10.2 Conformance specification |
56 | 10.3 Levels of conformance 10.4 Implementation conformance statements |
61 | Annex A (informative) Bibliography |
62 | Annex B (normative) Any additional ASN.1 definitions B.1 PHD DM status, CGM status, and measurement status bit mappings |
63 | B.2 Numeric extension for measurement confidence |
64 | Annex C (normative) Allocation of identifiers C.1 General C.2 Definitions of terms and codes |
66 | C.3 Systematic derivations of terms and codes |
68 | Annex D (informative) Message sequence examples |
70 | Annex E (informative) Protocol data unit examples E.1 General E.2 Association information exchange |
73 | E.3 Configuration information exchange |
76 | E.4 GET MDS attributes service |
78 | E.5 Data reporting E.6 Disassociation |
80 | Back cover |