Title: Basic Safety, Essential Performance, and EMC
1Basic Safety, Essential Performance, and EMC
- Frank OBrien
- www.obcompman.com
2Topics
- IEC 60601-1, 3rd edition, pre-FDIS
text2004-04Medical electrical equipment Part
1 General requirements for basic safety and
essential performance - Background
- Basic Safety, Essential Performance
- Risk Management Process
- New Requirements of Interest
- Electrical, Mechanical, Thermal
3Topics
- IEC 60601122001 A12004-09Medical
electrical equipment Part 1-2 General
requirements for safety Collateral standard
Electromagnetic compatibility Requirements and
tests - Overview of changes
- EMC essential performance
4Jurisdictional Authority
- 2nd edition in use
- IEC 60601-11988 A11991 A21995
- Forms the basis for national/regional consensus
standard in all major medical device markets - Including US, Europe, Japan, Canada,
Australia/New Zealand, South Korea, China, Brazil
5SC62A Working Groups
- WG 5 Ergonomics and graphical symbols
- WG 11 Medical electrical systems
- WG 14 Testing to General Safety Standard
- WG 15 Risk management
- WG 16 Electrical hazards
- WG 17 Mechanical hazards
- WG 18 Overheating, fire protection and other
- WG 22 Programmable electrical medical systems
(PEMS)
6Release Schedule
7IEC 60601-1, Collaterals, Particulars
Collateral Standards
Requirements for specific technologies and/or
hazards
General Standard 60601-1
60601-1-2 EMC
60601-1-3 Radiation Protection
60601-1-6 Usability
60601-1-8 Alarms
Particular Standards
Requirements for specific equipment types
60601-2-2 High Frequency Surgical Equipment
60601-2-1 Medical Electron Accelerators
60601-2-38 Electrically Operated Hospital Beds
60601-2-50 Infant Phototherapy Equipment
8Collaterals Inserted into General Standard
IEC 60601-1-4, PEMS (software)
Clause 14
IEC 60601-1, 3rd Edition
IEC 60601-1-1, Systems
Clause 16
9Scope, Clause 1.1
- Applies to the BASIC SAFETY and ESSENTIAL
PERFORMANCE of MEDICAL ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT and
MEDICAL ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
10Terminology, Clauses 3.63, 3.64
- ME Equipment
- Having an APPLIED PART or detecting/transmitting
energy with PATIENT and intended to
diagnose, treat or monitor or to compensate or
alleviate disease, injury or disability - Includes necessary ACCESSORIES
- ME System
- Combination of equipment at least one of which
is ME EQUIPMENT
11Terminology, Clauses 3.10, 3.27
- Basic Safety
- Freedom from unacceptable RISK directly caused
by HAZARDS when ME EQUIPMENT is used in NORMAL
and SINGLE FAULT CONDITION - Essential Performance
- Performance necessary to achieve freedom from
unacceptable RISK - Would absence or degradation of function result
in unacceptable risk?
12Terminology, Clauses 3.39, 3.102, 3.38
- Hazard potential source of harm
- Risk Probability Severity
- Harm physical injury or damage to health or
property
ISO 14971
13Risk Management Process, Clause 4.1, 4.2, 4.7
- requirements shall apply in NORMAL USE and
reasonably foreseeable misuse - A RISK MANAGEMENT PROCESS complying with ISO
14971 shall be performed - Residual RISK must be acceptable
- ME Equipment shall be SINGLE FAULT SAFE (free
of unacceptable RISK under SINGLE FAULT CONDITION)
14Risk Management Process, 4.3
- Manufacturer identifies which functions are
Essential Performance - Determined by manufacturers policy for Risk
acceptability - Collateral and Particular Standards aligned
with 3rd edition are expected to identify
specific Essential Performance, Annex A, 3.27
15Risk Management Process
- When desired, in many cases, still a test
standard with pass/fail criteria - Can presume acceptable risk with compliance with
Clauses containing verifiable requirements - Annex A, Guidance and Rationale, Clause 4.2
- 2nd Edition was foremost a test standard with
pass/fail criteria - When desired, allowed risk analysis to evaluate
alternative constructions offering equivalent
degree of safety, Clause 3.4
16Risk Management Process
- A formal Quality System is NOT required
- A quality system facilitates dealing with risk
management in a systematic way - PEMS requires a Development Life Cycle
- An explanatory note to Clause 14.4 references IEC
62304, (under development), which requires
q-system - FDA QSR requires a q-system w/design controls
- Where a documented design/development process
exists, it shall incorporate the risk mgt process - ISO 14971, Clause 3.2
17Risk Management Process
- Risk analysis
- Intended use/intended purpose identification
- Hazard identification
- Risk estimation
Risk assessment
- Risk evaluation
- Risk acceptability decisions
Risk management
- Risk control
- Option analysis
- Implementation
- Residual risk evaluation/Overall risk acceptance
- Post-production information
- Post-production experience
- Review of risk management experience
ISO 14971 Figure 1
18Risk Regions
Frequent
Intolerable
Probable
Probability
ALARP As Low As Reasonably Practicable
Occasional
Remote
Broadly Acceptable
Improbable
Incredible
Negligible
Marginal
Critical
Catastrophic
Example based onISO 14971, Fig E.1
Severity
19Development Life Cycle Process(facilitates risk
mgt, not required)
Verification of Risk Controls
1.Requirements, Analysis, Specifications
7. Systems Test
Validation
Ongoing Risk Analysis
Verification
6. Integration Test
2. Top-Level Design, Specification
5. Module Test
3. Detailed Design, Specification
Verification
4. Implementation
Example based on Fig H.2 (PEMS)
20New Requirements of Interest
- Use of ITE (computer) Power Supplies acceptable
with - ME Systems, Clause 16, Annex I
- If ITE in patient environment, separation
transformer is possible solution - ME Equipment, Clause 8.5, 4.6
- Accessible surfaces are unlikely to contact
PATIENT - 2 MEANS OF OPERATOR PROTECTION (MOOP)
- Compliance with Leakage Current limits, Clause
8.7 - 5/10 mA Earth, 100/500 uA Touch, (NC/SFC)
21New Requirements of Interest
- New TRAPPING ZONE mitigation options
- Gaps, 9.2.2.2, Table 20
- Safety Distances, 9.2.2.3, ISO 13852
- Guards, and Protective Measures, 9.2.2.4
- Includes collision detection systems
- Continuous Activation, 9.2.2.5
22New Requirements of Interest
- Reduced TENSILE SAFETY FACTORS, Clause 9.8, Table
21 - Material TENSILE STRENGTH and all external forces
are quantifiable and accurate - Safety Factors reduced by 37.5 (e.g. from 4 to
2.5)
23New Requirements of Interest
- Maximum allowable surface temperatures are time
dependent, and increased, Clause 11.1, Tables 23
and 24 - Example from Table 24
- Applied Parts gt 41 C need to be disclosed in IFU
24EMC, IEC 60601-1-22001
- Became effective in Europe in Nov 2004 (DOW)
- Many changes
25Major Changes to IEC 60601122001
- Emissions exemption deleted
- New requirements for Harmonic emissions and
Flicker for class B - Allowance for ITE
- Extensive disclosure documentation requirements
- Labeling
26Major Changes to IEC 60601122001
- New Immunity requirements
- Conducted 150 kHz to 80 MHz
- Radiated extended to 2.5 GHz
- ESD 6 kV contact
- EFT Burst 2 kV power lines 1 kV signal
lines - Surge 2 kV line to gnd 1 kV line to line
- Voltage dips and interruptions
- Magnetic Fields 3A/m.
- ESD exemption
27Major Changes to IEC 60601122001
- Performance and safety based Passing at reduced
levels is no longer allowed if function is
associated with Essential Performance - Extensive compliance criteria
- Compliance required during and after a test
- Essential Performance determination
- Applies to Systems and may require risk analysis
- Non-medical electrical equipment may be exempt.
28IEC 60601-1-2, Amendment12004-09
- Removes Definition and Capitalization from
Essential Performance term - Allows the developing interpretation in IEC
60601-1 to drive the application in 60601-1-2
rather than the other way around - essential performance is identified and
disclosed by manufacturer, Clause 3.201.2 - Annex GGG, Guidance for identification of
essential performance, refers to draft 3rd
edition
29EMC Essential Performance
- IMMUNITY TEST LEVELS represent normal use
environment, Clause 36.202.1.a - During Immunity testing, each function
associated with essential performance is tested,
Clause 36.202.1.c - During Immunity testing, compliance criteria for
essential performance is specified in Clause
36.202.1.j - Shall be able to provide identified essential
performance and remain safe
30Summary
- IEC 60601-1, 3rd Ed. expected in Dec 2005(?)
- National/regional versions mid-late 2006(?)
- Older versions withdrawn, mid-late 2009-2011(?)
- Risk Management Process Required
- Can presume acceptable risk with verifiable
requirements - Essential Performance Required
- No unacceptable risk from loss of function
- EMC essential performance is disclosed