Cardinal Health Kangaroo Omni 385400 Instructions For Use Manual page 85

Enteral feeding pump
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Appendix B - Explanation of Alarms
Priority Handling of Information Signals
In all cases, High Priority alarms are the most important and override any other alarm conditions. A medium or low
priority alarm will never disable a High Priority alarm. Medium Priority alarms all have equal weighting. There should
never be a situation when medium priority alarms are occurring at the same time, so there is no need to assign a
weighting within the medium alarm priority.
Kangaroo OMNI™ Enteral Feeding Pump never changes the priority of alarms based on situational or environmental
conditions. Alarm priority of Kangaroo OMNI™ Enteral Feeding Pump remains fixed. Additionally, Kangaroo OMNI™
Enteral Feeding Pump does not change Alarm Signal Generation delay or Alarm Condition delay as a result of
situational or environmental conditions. Finally, Kangaroo OMNI™ Enteral Feeding Pump does not change the
characteristic of the generated alarm signals. Below is the listing of alarm priorities for the Kangaroo OMNI™ Enteral
Feeding Pump:
High Priority
0: System Alarm Condition
1: Dead Battery Alarm Condition (<3 minutes)
2: All Other Critical Alarm Conditions
Medium Priority
3: Low Battery Caution Alarm Condition (<15 minutes)
4: Valve Error Alarm Condition
5: All Error Alarm Conditions
Low Priority
6: Low Battery Notice Alarm Condition (<30 minutes)
7: Other Notification Conditions
In this case, the number 0 represents the Highest Priority.
Follow instructions for use. Symbol appears blue on device. MR Unsafe – an item that is known to pose hazards in all
MR environments. Type BF applied part. Class II equipment. Protection against fluid ingress: Drip-proof. Non-ionizing
electromagnetic radiation.
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