ISO 16021:2024

International Standard   Current Edition · Approved on 26 March 2024

Absorbent incontinence products for urine and/or faeces — Basic principles for evaluation of single-use adult products from the perspective of users and caregivers

ISO 16021:2024 Files

English 11 Pages
Current Edition
81.99 USD

ISO 16021:2024 Scope

This document provides guidelines and requirements for designing and conducting an evaluation of single-use adult incontinence absorbing products. It provides guidelines and requirements on creating data collection tools. In particular, it provides a framework for eliciting and recording the views of users and their carers on the acceptability of products. In addition, a product diary is described which can help to quantify some parameters of product use, such as wear times, the mass of urine absorbed by the product and the severity of any leakage from it.

This document does not cover direct comparison between products based on statistical parameters, neither does it provide guidelines on measuring the clinical efficacy of products; that is available in ISO 14155.

Best Sellers

GSO 150-2:2013
 
Gulf Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
YSMO GSO 150-2:2020
GSO 150-2:2013 
Yemeni Technical Regulation
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
YSMO GSO 2055-1:2020
GSO 2055-1:2015 
Yemeni Standard
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements
GSO 2055-1:2015
 
Gulf Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements

Recently Published

ISO 16408:2025
 
International Standard
Dentistry — Oral care products — Oral rinses
ISO 16383-1:2025
 
International Standard
Geotechnical investigation and testing — Laboratory testing of rock — Part 1: Determination of water content
ISO 2361:2025
 
International Standard
Electrodeposited nickel coatings on magnetic and non-magnetic substrates — Measurement of coating thickness — Magnetic method
ISO/TS 6226:2025
 
International Standard
Health informatics — Reference architecture for syndromic surveillance systems for infectious diseases