BS EN ISO 21549-3:2014
$142.49
Health informatics. Patient healthcard data – Limited clinical data
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2014 | 24 |
This part of ISO 21549 is applicable to situations in which limited clinical data are recorded on or transported by patient healthcards compliant with the physical dimensions of ID-1 cards defined by ISO/IEC 7810.
This part of ISO 21549 describes and defines the limited clinical data objects used in or referenced by patient healthcards using UML, plain text and abstract syntax notation (ASN.1).
This part of ISO 21549 specifies the basic structure of the data contained within the data object limited clinical data, but does not specify or mandate particular data sets for storage on devices. In particular the data contained within the data objects in limited clinical data are intended to aid the delivery of emergency care, while being by themselves neither intended, nor fit for purpose, for the total of information provision for the delivery of emergency care.
The detailed functions and mechanisms of the following services are not within the scope of this part of ISO 21549, (although its structures can accommodate suitable data objects elsewhere specified):
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the encoding of free text data;
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security functions and related services which are likely to be specified by users for data cards depending on their specific application, for example: confidentiality protection, data integrity protection, and authentication of persons and devices related to these functions;
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access control services which may depend on active use of some data card classes such as microprocessor cards;
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the initialisation and issuing process (which begins the operating lifetime of an individual data card, and by which the data card is prepared for the data to be subsequently communicated to it according to this part of ISO 21549).
The following topics are therefore beyond the scope of this part of ISO 21549:
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physical or logical solutions for the practical functioning of particular types of data cards;
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how the message is processed further “downstream” of the interface between two systems;
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the form which data takes for use outside the data card, or the way in which such data are visibly represented on the data card or elsewhere.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
4 | Foreword |
6 | Foreword |
8 | Introduction |
11 | Section sec_1 Section sec_2 1 Scope 2 Normative references |
12 | Section sec_3 Section sec_3.1 Section sec_3.2 Section sec_3.3 Section sec_4 Section sec_5 Figure fig_1 3 Terms and definitions 4 Symbols and abbreviated terms 5 Basic data object model for a healthcare data card – Patient healthcard data object structure |
13 | Section sec_6 Section sec_6.1 Section sec_6.2 Section sec_6.3 Section sec_6.4 6 Basic data objects for referencing 6.1 Overview 6.2 Coded data 6.3 Device and data security attributes 6.4 Accessory attributes |
14 | Section sec_7 Section sec_7.1 Figure fig_2 Table tab_1 Section sec_7.2 Figure fig_3 7 Limited clinical data 7.1 General 7.2 The limited emergency data set |
15 | Table tab_2 Section sec_7.3 Figure fig_4 Table tab_3 Figure fig_5 Table tab_4 7.3 Immunization details |
16 | Table tab_5 Section sec_7.4 Figure fig_6 Table tab_6 Figure fig_7 7.4 Blood grouping and transfusion record |
17 | Table tab_7 Figure fig_8 Table tab_8 Section sec_7.5 Figure fig_9 7.5 The extended emergency data set |
18 | Table tab_9 Table tab_10 Figure fig_10 Table tab_11 |
19 | Annex sec_A Annex A (normative) ASN.1 Data definitions |
21 | Reference ref_1 Reference ref_2 Reference ref_3 Reference ref_4 Reference ref_5 Reference ref_6 Reference ref_7 Reference ref_8 Reference ref_9 Reference ref_10 Reference ref_11 Reference ref_12 Bibliography |