44ba62365a | ||
---|---|---|
CodeExcerpts | ||
Documentation | ||
Impala | ||
Oracle | ||
PostgreSQL | ||
Sql Server | ||
LICENSE | ||
OMOP_CDM_v5_1_0.pdf | ||
README.md |
README.md
Common Data Model v5.1.0
See full CDM specification file on our github wiki or in the CDM V5.1.0 PDF
Release Notes
This version is based on this CDM working group proposal #60 and #59. The proposed and accepted changes include adding a datetime field to every table that had a date column and adding field DENOMINATOR_VALUE to the DRUG_STRENGTH table. These were the new columns added:
PERSON
- birth_datetime, not required
SPECIMEN
- specimen_datetime, not required
DEATH
- death_datetime, not required
VISIT_OCCURRENCE
- visit_start_datetime, not required
- visit_end_datetime, not required
PROCEDURE_OCCURRENCE
- procedure_datetime, not required
DRUG_EXPOSURE
- drug_exposure_start_datetime, not required
- drug_exposure_end_datetime, not required
DRUG_STRENGTH
- DENOMINATOR_VALUE, not required
DEVICE_EXPOSURE
- device_exposure_start_datetime, not required
- device_exposure_end_datetime, not required
CONDITION_OCCURRENCE
- condition_start_datetime, not required
- condition_end_datetime, not required
MEASUREMENT
- measurement_datetime as time, not required
OBSERVATION
- observation_datetime, not required
NOTE
- note_datetime, not required
This repo contains the definition of the OMOP Common Data Model. It supports the 4 SQL technologies: Impala, Oracle, Postgres and SQL Server. For each, the DDL, constraints and indexes (if appropriate) are defined.
Versions are defined using tagging and versioning. Full versions (V6, 7 etc.) are released each year (1-Jan) and are not backwards compatible. Minor versions (V5.1, 5.2 etc.) are released each quarter (1-Apr, 1-Jul and 1-Sep) and are not guaranteed to be backwards compatible though an effort is made to make sure that current queries will not break. Micro versions (V5.1.1, V5.1.2 etc.) are released irregularly and often, and contain small hot fixes or backward compatible changes to the last minor version.