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CEN/TR 15253:2005

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Health informatics - Quality of service requirements for health information interchange

Published date

12-07-2005

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Foreword
Introduction
0 Scope
1 Structure of this document
2 References
3 Abbreviation
4 Terms and definitions
5 Quality of service concepts
6 Current relevant work in healthcare
   informatics standardisation
7 Typical healthcare QoS scenarios
8 Healthcare QoS categories
9 Development of ETG 021 Method
10 Summary and conclusions
Annex A Application of QoS concepts

This document is concerned with QoS as it applies to interactions between components of distributed healthcare IT systems. The scope is not limited to network infrastructures; it includes the QoS requirements of information storage and processing IT systems. The related areas of security and financial cost considerations are not within the primary scope of the document, although they are considered briefly. Of course, an informatics system with a high QoS does not guarantee a high standard of healthcare in terms of clinical outcomes or patient care. The quality of healthcare delivered to patients (the ultimate "users") depends upon a number of external factors such as the experience and competence of the healthcare professional(s) or institution(s) involved. Potential QoS characteristics for the total healthcare delivery process such as mortality rate, clinical outcome, etc. are therefore not within the scope of this report.The report contains no provisions to avoid the incorporation of bad or dangerous practice into healthcare IT systems. It is possible to circumvent good clinical practice with technical solutions which may cause bad practice. This vital issue is not covered by this report. To take an example scenario:A patient consults a doctor, who takes a blood sample and arranges to see the patient again in two weeks.a)A "good" practice doctor sees and reviews the blood test result as soon as it comes back from the laboratory and then files it if no action is required.b)A "bad" practice doctor sees and reviews the blood test results only when he reviews the patient's case on the patient's next visit. This case is not defensible if the patient has a preventable adverse event and takes legal action (source: MPS Casebook Summer 1997). The healthcare information system put into the medical practice in electronic form could build-in either practice (a) or practice (b). This report does not consider the clinical quality assurance mechanism fo

Committee
CEN/TC 251
DocumentType
Technical Report
PublisherName
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
Status
Current

Standards Relationship
I.S. CEN/TR 15253:2006 Identical
NEN NPR CEN/TR 15253 : 2005 Identical
PD CEN/TR 15253:2005 Identical
UNE-CEN/TR 15253:2006 IN Identical

CR 12161:1995 A method for defining profiles for healthcare
ISO/IEC 11172-4:1995 Information technology — Coding of moving pictures and associated audio for digital storage media at up to about 1,5 Mbit/s — Part 4: Compliance testing
ISO/IEC 13236:1998 Information technology — Quality of service: Framework
ISO/IEC 7498-1:1994 Information technology Open Systems Interconnection Basic Reference Model: The Basic Model
ISO/IEC TR 13243:1999 Information technology Quality of service Guide to methods and mechanisms
ISO 13488:1996 Quality systems — Medical devices — Particular requirements for the application of ISO 9002
CR 12069 : 1995 PROFILES FOR MEDICAL IMAGE INTERCHANGE
ISO 13485:2016 Medical devices Quality management systems Requirements for regulatory purposes
ISO/IEC 11172-2:1993 Information technology Coding of moving pictures and associated audio for digital storage media at up to about 1,5 Mbit/s Part 2: Video
ISO/IEC 10746-2:2009 Information technology Open distributed processing Reference model: Foundations Part 2:
ISO/IEC 11172-1:1993 Information technology Coding of moving pictures and associated audio for digital storage media at up to about 1,5 Mbit/s Part 1: Systems

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