1、American National StandardDeveloped byfor Information Technology Identification Cards Health Care Identification CardsINCITS 284-2011INCITS 284-2011Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without li
2、cense from IHS-,-,-Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS 284-2011Revision ofINCITS 284-1997 (R2008)American National Standardfor Information Technology Identifi
3、cation Cards Health Care Identification CardsSecretariatInformation Technology Industry CouncilApproved October 5, 2011American National Standards Institute, Inc.Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permit
4、ted without license from IHS-,-,-Approval of an American National Standard requires review by ANSI that therequirements for due process, consensus, and other criteria for approval havebeen met by the standards developer.Consensus is established when, in the judgement of the ANSI Board ofStandards Re
5、view, substantial agreement has been reached by directly andmaterially affected interests. Substantial agreement means much more thana simple majority, but not necessarily unanimity. Consensus requires that allviews and objections be considered, and that a concerted effort be madetowards their resol
6、ution.The use of American National Standards is completely voluntary; theirexistence does not in any respect preclude anyone, whether he has approvedthe standards or not, from manufacturing, marketing, purchasing, or usingproducts, processes, or procedures not conforming to the standards.The America
7、n National Standards Institute does not develop standards andwill in no circumstances give an interpretation of any American NationalStandard. Moreover, no person shall have the right or authority to issue aninterpretation of an American National Standard in the name of the AmericanNational Standard
8、s Institute. Requests for interpretations should beaddressed to the secretariat or sponsor whose name appears on the titlepage of this standard.CAUTION NOTICE: This American National Standard may be revised orwithdrawn at any time. The procedures of the American National StandardsInstitute require t
9、hat action be taken periodically to reaffirm, revise, orwithdraw this standard. Purchasers of American National Standards mayreceive current information on all standards by calling or writing the AmericanNational Standards Institute.American National StandardPublished byAmerican National Standards I
10、nstitute, Inc.25 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036Copyright 2011 by Information Technology Industry Council (ITI)All rights reserved.No part of this publication may be reproduced in anyform, in an electronic retrieval system or otherwise,without prior written permission of ITI, 1101 K Street NW,
11、Suite 610, Washington, DC 20005. Printed in the United States of AmericaCAUTION: The developers of this standard have requested that holders of patents that may berequired for the implementation of the standard disclose such patents to the publisher. However,neither the developers nor the publisher
12、have undertaken a patent search in order to identifywhich, if any, patents may apply to this standard. As of the date of publication of this standardand following calls for the identification of patents that may be required for the implementation ofthe standard, no such claims have been made. No fur
13、ther patent search is conducted by the de-veloper or publisher in respect to any standard it processes. No representation is made or impliedthat licenses are not required to avoid infringement in the use of this standard.Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license w
14、ith ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-iContentsPageForeword ii0 Introduction. 11 Scope and field of application. 12 Conformance 13 Normative references . 14 Definitions. 35 Normative annexes. 36 Human-readable information 47 Machine-readable info
15、rmation 7AnnexesA Mapping of health care identification card information to magnetic stripe cards . 10B Mapping of health care identification card information to USS PDF417 2-dimensional bar code 13C Mapping of health care identification card information toproximity contactless integrated circuit(s)
16、 cards (PICC). 16D Mapping of health care identification card information to integrated circuit cards (ICC) with contacts 21E Mapping of health care identification card information to optical memory cards . 23F Embossing of health care identification card information elements 24G Display of card hol
17、der portrait on health care identification card 25H Bibliography 26Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-iiForeword (This foreword is not part of American National Sta
18、ndard INCITS 284-2011.)The purpose of the Uniform Health Care Identification Card standard is to provide auniform means to identify (a) issuers and (b) holders of health care identificationcards within the United States.The standard specifies minimum requirements for the presentation of identificati
19、oninformation in human-readable form, and it specifies the format and data content ofidentification in the following technologies: magnetic stripe, USS PDF417 2-dimen-sional bar code, contactless integrated circuit, integrated circuit with contact, opticalmemory, embossing, and portrait. This standa
20、rd requires either or both Track 3 Mag-netic Stripe or USS PDF417. Other technologies are optional.The scope of the standard is to specify identification information for health care appli-cations. It does not standardize recording of demographic, diagnostic, prescriptive,medical encounter, or other
21、health care data about the cardholder; however, in thehigh-capacity technologies, the standard employs international standard applicationcoding such that additional applications may be possible on the same card.This standard is a U.S. health care application of existing international identificationc
22、ard standards that relate to physical characteristics, layout, data access and storagetechniques, and to registration procedures for identification of card issuers. Work on the standard began in 1991 and 1992. The standard results from coopera-tion between ANSI ASC INCITS B10, ANSI ASC X12N, the Nat
23、ional Council for Pre-scription Drug Programs (NCPDP), and the Workgroup for Electronic DataInterchange (WEDI), each of which has open and balanced membership. This 2011standard is a revision of the 1997 standard.Development involved broad-based project teams including hospitals and otherhealth care
24、 providers, government, insurers, health maintenance organizations, net-work operators, equipment and software suppliers, card vendors, service, fiscalagent, processors, and consultants. The project teams brought the experience set ofthose that produce, issue, use, and process the millions of health
25、 identification cardsthat are now in circulation. The standard implements the 1993 WEDI and ASC X12Nrecommendations, adding to them additional, high-capacity technologies, and provid-ing compatibility for a health insurance card and a bank card to co-exist on the samephysical card.There are two Impl
26、ementation Guides that apply this revised standard to specific in-dustry needs:- WEDI Health Identification Card Implementation Guide obtainable fromwww.wedi.org.- NCPDP Health Care Identification Card, Pharmacy and/or Combination ID Cardobtainable from www.ncpdp.org.The standard meets the following
27、 objectives: - to identify uniquely the card issuer and cardholder;- to bring uniformity to the millions of health care identification cards now in circula-tion, including cards issued by health care payers, providers, and others;- to encourage transition from existing practice to the new standard;-
28、 to assist administrative efficiency and accuracy through machine-readable identifi-cation within a foundation that encourages future applications;- to facilitate future development in technology and application.Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI
29、Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-iiiThis standard contains eight annexes. Annexes A, B, F, and G are normative and areconsidered part of this standard. Annexes C, D, E, and H are informative and are notconsidered part of this standard.Requests for in
30、terpretation, suggestions for improvement or addenda, or defect re-ports are welcome. Please send these to the INCITS Secretariat, Information Tech-nology Industry Council, 1101 K Street, NW, Suite 610, Washington, DC 20005.This standard was processed and approved for submittal to ANSI by INCITS, wi
31、thASC X12N as coordinating liaison. Committee approval of this standard does notnecessarily imply that all committee members voted for its approval. At the time it ap-proved this revised standard, INCITS had the following members:Don Wright, ChairJennifer Garner, SecretaryOrganization Represented Na
32、me of RepresentativeAdobe Systems, Inc. .Scott Foshee Steve Zilles (Alt.)AIM Global, Inc. .Steve HallidayApple Computer, Inc. .Helene WorkmanDavid Singer (Alt.)Distributed Management Task Force .John Crandall Jeff Hilland (Alt.)Electronic Industries Alliance .Edward Mikoski, Jr. Henry Cuschieri (Alt
33、.)EMC Corporation .Gary RobinsonFarance, Inc. .Frank FaranceTimothy Schoechle (Alt.)GS1 US Frank SharkeyCharles Biss (Alt.)Hewlett-Packard Company Karen Higginbottom Paul Jeran (Alt.)IBM Corporation .Gerald Lane Robert Weir (Alt.)Arnaud Le Hors (Alt.)Debra Boland (Alt.)Steve Holbrook (Alt.)Alexander
34、 Tarpinian (Alt.)IEEETerry deCourcelleJodie Haasz (Alt.)Bob Labelle (Alt.)Joan Woolery (Alt.)Intel Philip Wennblom Grace Wei (Alt.)Stephen Balogh (Alt.)Lexmark International .Don Wright Dwight Lewis (Alt.)Paul Menard (Alt.)Jerry Thrasher (Alt.)Microsoft CorporationJim Hughes Dick Brackney (Alt.)John
35、 Calhoun (Alt.)National Institute of Standards University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences)Ken Masslon, Co-Chair(United Health Group)This 2011 revised standard results from extensive stakeholder participation and workgroup efforts in the Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI) and the Na-ti
36、onal Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP). Organizations and personswho made important contributions are individually listed in the respective WEDI andNCPDP guides for implementation of this standard.Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI No
37、t for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-viCopyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARD INCITS 284-2011Amer
38、ican National Standard for Information Technology Identification Cards Health Care Identification Cards 1 0 Introduction This American National Standard describes the parameters for identification cards for health care applications in the United States. 1 Scope and field of application This American
39、 National Standard specifies directly or by reference the requirements for cards used in health care transactions. It takes into consideration both human and machine aspects and states minimum requirements for conformity. It contains physical characteristics, layout, data access techniques, data sto
40、rage techniques, numbering system, registration procedures, but not security requirements. Security measures are at the discretion of the card issuer. 2 Conformance An identification card is in conformance with this standard if it meets all mandatory requirements specified directly or by reference h
41、erein. 3 Normative references The following standards contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute provisions of this American National Standard. All standards are subject to revision, and parties to agreements based on this American National Standard are encouraged to invest
42、igate the possibility of applying the most recent editions of the standards indicated below. Specification for Track 3 Magnetic Stripe in American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) Standard: Personal Identification AAMVA International Specification DL/ID Card Design, March 2005. IS
43、O/IEC 7810:2003, Identification cards Physical characteristics 1) ISO/IEC 7811-1:2002, Identification cards Recording technique Part 1: Embossing 1)ISO/IEC 7811-2:2001, Identification cards Recording technique Part 2: Magnetic stripe 1)ISO/IEC 7811-6:2001, Identification cards Recording technique Pa
44、rt 6: High coercivity magnetic stripe 1)ISO 7816-1:1998, Identification cards Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 1: Physical characteristics 1)ISO 7816-2:1999, Identification cards Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 2: Dimensions and location of contacts 1)1 ) ISO standards a
45、re available from the American National Standards Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036, www.ansi.org. Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS 284-20
46、11 2 ISO 7816-3:1997, Identification cards Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 3: Electronic signals and transmission protocols 1)ISO/IEC 7816-4:2005, Identification cards Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 4: Inter-industry commands 1)ISO/IEC 7816-5:2005, Identification cards
47、 Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 5: Numbering system and registration procedure for application identifiers 1)ISO/IEC 7816-6:2004, Identification cards Integrated circuit(s) cards with contacts Part 6: Inter-industry data elements 1)ISO/IEC 10373, Identification cards Test methods (Pa
48、rts 1-7 depending on technology being used on the card.) 1)ISO/IEC 11693:2000, Identification cards Optical memory cards General characteristics 1)ISO/IEC 11694-1:2005, Identification cards Optical memory cards Linear recording method Part 1: Physical characteristics 1)ISO/IEC 11694-2:2005, Identification cards Optical memory cards Linear recording method Part 2: Dimensions and location of the accessible optical area 1)ISO/IEC 11694-3:2001, Identification cards Optical memory cards Linear recording method Part 3: Optical properties and characteristics 1)IS
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