Title :
Systems engineering and software development for the NIH fetal saturation (FOX) trial
Author :
Weininger, Sandy
Author_Institution :
Center for Devices & Radiol. Health, US Food & Drug Adm., Rockville, MD, USA
Abstract :
NIH-NICHD plans to analyze electronic fetal monitoring signals and data recorded from 10000 pregnant women to assess the efficacy of the fetal oxygen saturation modality. The FOX project involves a systems engineering effort to determine the necessary fetal monitor configurations and interfaces, and a software development effort to design and implement an application to manage the study and collect the physiologic data from the monitors and store it on a PC. Major activities were the development of a project requirements document, a test plan, a requirements/design specification, a functioning prototype and final product, and to perform design reviews. Milestones included the delivery of a project requirements document and requirements specification, a prototype, completion of user acceptance testing on the final design, and beta site and full site deployments.
Keywords :
computerised monitoring; data acquisition; medical computing; microcomputer applications; obstetrics; oximetry; patient monitoring; project management; software development management; systems engineering; FOX project; NIH fetal saturation trial; NIH-NICHD; PC; beta site deployment; design reviews; electronic fetal monitoring signals; fetal monitor configurations; fetal oxygen saturation modality; final product; full site deployment; functioning prototype; interfaces; physiologic data; pregnant women; project requirements document; prototype; requirements/design specification; software development; software development effort; systems engineering; test plan; user acceptance testing; Application software; Data engineering; Design engineering; Monitoring; Pregnancy; Programming; Project management; Signal analysis; Software development management; Systems engineering and theory;
Conference_Titel :
Bioengineering Conference, 2003 IEEE 29th Annual, Proceedings of
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7767-2
DOI :
10.1109/NEBC.2003.1216078