GSO IEC 82304-1:2021
IEC 82304-1:2016
Gulf Standard
Current Edition
·
Approved on
01 July 2021
Health software - Part 1: General requirements for product safety
GSO IEC 82304-1:2021 Files
English
55 Pages
Current Edition
Reference Language
Obtaining this standard through the store is currently unavailable. You can acquire it directly from its source.
GSO IEC 82304-1:2021 Scope
IEC 82304-1:2016 applies to the safety and security of health software products designed to operate on general computing platforms and intended to be placed on the market without dedicated hardware, and its primary focus is on the requirements for manufacturers.
It covers the entire lifecycle including design, development, validation, installation, maintenance, and disposal of health software products.
Best Sellers From Information Sector
OS GSO ISO/TR 18492:2017
ISO/TR 18492:2005
Omani Standard
Long-term preservation of electronic document-based information
GSO ISO/TR 18492:2017
ISO/TR 18492:2005
Gulf Standard
Long-term preservation of electronic document-based information
GSO ISO/TS 23635:2024
ISO/TS 23635:2022
Gulf Standard
Blockchain and distributed ledger technologies — Guidelines for governance
GSO ISO/IEC 15773:2013
ISO/IEC 15773:1998
Gulf Standard
Information technology -- Telecommunications and information exchange between systems -- Broadband Private Integrated Services Network -- Inter-exchange signalling protocol -- Transit counter additional network feature
Recently Published from Information Sector
GSO ISO/IEC 30141:2026
ISO/IEC 30141:2024
Gulf Standard
Internet of Things (IoT) — Reference architecture
GSO ISO/IEC 4944:2026
ISO/IEC 4944:2024
Gulf Standard
Information technology — User interfaces — Evaluating usability of natural user interfaces
GSO ISO 24311:2026
ISO 24311:2024
Gulf Standard
Intelligent transport systems — Mobility integration — 'Controlled zone' management for urban vehicle access restrictions (UVARs) using C-ITS
GSO ISO/IEC 3532-2:2026
ISO/IEC 3532-2:2024
Gulf Standard
Information technology — Medical image-based modelling for 3D printing — Part 2: Segmentation