Journal article

Customers who have bought a comfort alarm also bought wireless cable and volleyball rackets. Legal and medical aspects of so-called comfort alarms


Authors listRoehrig, R.; Kaiser, J.

Publication year2014

Pages514-516

JournalDer Anaesthesist

Volume number63

Issue number6

ISSN0003-2417

eISSN1432-055X

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00101-014-2336-5

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
The word aEurosecondary alarm" also sometimes known as aEurocomfort alarm" means that a system indicates a critical situation (alarm condition) but this does not happen with the safety of an alarm system. A closer inspection of the small print reveals that the comfort alarm is in reality not an alarm but only additional information. This article summarizes in compact form what consequences this has for the user and what precautions should be taken when acquiring an alarm system.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleRoehrig, R. and Kaiser, J. (2014) Customers who have bought a comfort alarm also bought wireless cable and volleyball rackets. Legal and medical aspects of so-called comfort alarms, Der Anaesthesist, 63(6), pp. 514-516. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00101-014-2336-5

APA Citation styleRoehrig, R., & Kaiser, J. (2014). Customers who have bought a comfort alarm also bought wireless cable and volleyball rackets. Legal and medical aspects of so-called comfort alarms. Der Anaesthesist. 63(6), 514-516. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00101-014-2336-5



Keywords


clinical alarmsLegislation, hospitalpatient monitoringpatient safetyrisk management

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 02:12