Fact Relationship
The FACT_RELATIONSHIP table contains records about the relationships between facts stored as records in any table of the CDM. Relationships can be defined between facts from the same domain (table), or different domains.
Examples of Fact Relationships include:
- Person relationships (parent-child).
- Care Site relationships (hierarchical organizational structure of facilities within a health system).
- Indication relationship (between drug exposures and associated conditions).
- Usage relationships (of devices during the course of an associated procedure).
- Facts derived from one another (measurements derived from an associated specimen).
Field | Required | Type | FK Table | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
domain_concept_id_1 | Yes | bigint | CONCEPT | The concept representing the domain of fact one, from which the corresponding table can be inferred. |
fact_id_1 | Yes | bigint | The unique identifier in the table corresponding to the domain of fact one. | |
domain_concept_id_2 | Yes | bigint | CONCEPT | The concept representing the domain of fact two, from which the corresponding table can be inferred. |
fact_id_2 | Yes | bigint | The unique identifier in the table corresponding to the domain of fact two. | |
relationship_concept_id | Yes | bigint | CONCEPT | A foreign key to a Standard Concept ID in the Standardized Vocabularies, representing the kind of relationship. |
Conventions
-
All relationships are directional, and each relationship is represented twice symmetrically within the FACT_RELATIONSHIP table. For example, for two Persons where
person_id
= 1 is the mother ofperson_id
= 2, then two records are created:domain_concept_id_1 fact_id_1 domain_concept_id_2 fact_id_2 relationship_concept_id 1147314|person
1 1147314|person
2 4248584|Mother
1147314|person
2 1147314|person
1 4285883|Child