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Description / Abstract:
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 basic
electrocardiograph (ECG) 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. It
leverages appropriate portions of existing standards including
ISO/IEEE 11073 terminology and IEEE Std 11073-20601 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 basic ECG (1- to 3-lead ECG) devices. Monitoring ECG
devices are distinguished from diagnostic ECG equipment with
respect to including support for wearable ECG devices, limiting the
number of leads supported by the equipment to three, and not
requiring the capability of annotating or analyzing the detected
electrical activity to determine known cardiac phenomena. This
standard is consistent with the base framework and allows
multifunction implementations by following multiple device
specializations (e.g., ECG and respiration rate).
Purpose
This standard addresses a need for an openly defined,
independent standard for controlling information exchange to and
from personal health devices and managers (e.g., cell phones,
personal computers, personal health appliances, and set top boxes).
Interoperability is key to growing the potential market for these
devices and enabling people to be better informed participants in
the management of their health.