In Technology and health care : official journal of the European Society for Engineering and Medicine
BACKGROUND : Premature born infants or infants born sick require immediate medical attention and decreasing the stress imposed onto their body by the environment. Infant incubators provide an enclosed environment that can be controlled to fit the needs of the infant. As such, their performance must be consistent and without significant deviations. The only manner to ensure this is by post-market surveillance (PMS) focused on evaluation of both safety and performance. The new Medical Device Regulation (MDR) defines medical device post-market surveillance (PMS) as performed by independent, third-party, notified bodies more strategically in hope to improve traceability of device performance. However, there is still an apparent gap in terms of standardised conformity assessment testing methods.
OBJECTIVE : This paper proposes a novel method for conformity assessment testing of infant incubators for post-market surveillance purposes.
METHOD : The method was developed based on guidelines for devices providing measurements laid out by the International Organisation of Legal Metrology (OIML). The methodology was validated during a four year period in healthcare institutions of all levels.
RESULTS : The developed method was validated between 2018 and 2021 in healthcare institutions of all levels. The results obtained during validation suggest that conformity assessment testing of infant incubators as a method used during PMS contributes to significant improvement in devices' accuracy and reliability.
CONCLUSION : A standardized approach in conformity assessment testing of infant incubators during PMS, besides increasing reliability of the devices, is the first step in digital transformation of management of these devices in healthcare institutions opening possibility for use of artificial intelligence.
Badnjević Almir, Spahić Lemana, Jordamović Naida Babić, Pokvić Lejla Gurbeta
2022-Dec-08
Medical device, infant incubators, performance, post-market surveillance, standardisation, testing