DocumentCode :
3089286
Title :
Open source Patient-Controlled Analgesic pump requirements documentation
Author :
Larson, Brian R. ; Hatcliff, John ; Chalin, P.
Author_Institution :
Kansas State Univ., KS, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
20-21 May 2013
Firstpage :
28
Lastpage :
34
Abstract :
The dynamic nature of the medical domain is driving a need for continuous innovation and improvement in techniques for developing and assuring medical devices. Un-fortunately, research in academia and communication between academics, industrial engineers, and regulatory authorities is hampered by the lack of realistic non-proprietary development artifacts for medical devices. In this paper, we give an overview of a detailed requirements document for a Patient-Controlled Analgesic (PCA) pump developed under the US NSF´s Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Scholar-in-Residence (SIR) program. This 60+ page document follows the methodology outlined in the US Federal Aviation Administrations (FAA) Requirements Engineering Management Handbook (REMH) and includes a domain overview, use cases, statements of safety & security requirements, and formal top-level system architectural description. Based on previous experience with release of a requirements document for a cardiac pacemaker that spawned a number of research and pedagogical activities, we believe that the described PCA requirements document can be an important research enabler within the formal methods and software engineering communities.
Keywords :
biomedical equipment; formal verification; pacemakers; public domain software; safety-critical software; system documentation; Food and Drug Administration; PCA requirements document; REMH; Requirements Engineering Management Handbook; Scholar-in-Residence program; US FAA; US Federal Aviation Administrations; US NSF´s FDA SIR program; cardiac pacemaker; formal top-level system architectural description; medical devices; medical domain; open source patient-controlled analgesic pump requirements documentation; pedagogical activities; research activities; safety requirements; security requirements; software engineering communities; Computer architecture; Drugs; Hazards; Libraries; Principal component analysis; Reservoirs;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering in Health Care (SEHC), 2013 5th International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SEHC.2013.6602474
Filename :
6602474
Link To Document :
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