EN ISO 15621:2017
Withdrawn
A Withdrawn Standard is one, which is removed from sale, and its unique number can no longer be used. The Standard can be withdrawn and not replaced, or it can be withdrawn and replaced by a Standard with a different number.
Absorbent incontinence aids for urine and/or faeces - General guidelines on evaluation (ISO 15621:2017)
12-07-2017
31-01-2018
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Evaluation requirements
Bibliography
ISO 15621:2017 gives guidelines for evaluating absorbent incontinence aids for urine and/or faeces. It provides a context for the procedures described in other International Standards and published testing procedures. General factors relating to incontinence products and their usage are also addressed.
| Committee |
CEN/TC 293
|
| DocumentType |
Standard
|
| PublisherName |
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
|
| Status |
Withdrawn
|
| Standards | Relationship |
| I.S. EN ISO 15621:2017 | Identical |
| DIN EN ISO 15621:2017-09 | Identical |
| NF EN ISO 15621 : 2017 | Identical |
| BS EN ISO 15621:2017 | Identical |
| SS-EN ISO 15621:2017 | Identical |
| DIN EN ISO 15621:2016-06 (Draft) | Identical |
| NS EN ISO 15621 : 2017 | Identical |
| NEN EN ISO 15621 : 2017 | Identical |
| ISO 15621:2017 | Identical |
| PN EN ISO 15621 : 2017 | Identical |
| UNE-EN ISO 15621:2018 | Identical |
| ISO 11948-1:1996 | Urine-absorbing aids — Part 1: Whole-product testing |
| ISO 14044:2006 | Environmental management — Life cycle assessment — Requirements and guidelines |
| ISO 9999:2016 | Assistive products for persons with disability — Classification and terminology |
| ISO 14971:2007 | Medical devices — Application of risk management to medical devices |
| ISO 14040:2006 | Environmental management — Life cycle assessment — Principles and framework |
| ISO 6658:2017 | Sensory analysis — Methodology — General guidance |
| ISO 16021:2000 | Urine-absorbing aids — Basic principles for evaluation of single-use adult-incontinence-absorbing aids from the perspective of users and caregivers |