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[3] [4] OMOP developed a Common Data Model (CDM), standardizing the way observational data is represented. [3] After OMOP ended, this standard started being maintained and updated by OHDSI. [1] As of February 2024, the most recent CDM is at version 6.0, while version 5.4 is the stable version used by most tools in the OMOP ecosystem. [5]
A common data model (CDM) can refer to any standardised data model which allows for data and information exchange between different applications and data sources.Common data models aim to standardise logical infrastructure so that related applications can "operate on and share the same data", [1] and can be seen as a way to "organize data from many sources that are in different formats into a ...
OMOP: It is an acronym for Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership. The OMOP research program was initially established under Foundation for NIH) and created first version of OMOP common data model. The common data model was able to accommodate observational data of different types (both claims and electronic health records). It has a single ...
Sentinel Common Data Model: Initially started as Mini-Sentinel in 2008. Use by the Sentinel Initiative of the USA's Food and Drug Administration . OMOP Common Data Model : model that defines how electronic health record data, medical billing data or other healthcare data from multiple institutions can be harmonized and queried in unified way.
A common data model (CDM) is a specification that describes how data from multiple sources (e.g., multiple EHR systems) can be combined. Many CDMs use a relational model (e.g., the OMOP CDM). A relational CDM defines names of tables and table columns and restricts what values are valid.
The scientific data type layer identifies specific types of data, such as grids, images, and point data, and adds specialized methods for each kind of data. The data model of the data access layer is a generalization of the NetCDF-3 data model, and substantially the same as the NetCDF-4 data model.
The Common Information Model (CIM) is an open standard that defines how managed elements in an IT environment are represented as a common set of objects and relationships between them. The Distributed Management Task Force maintains the CIM to allow consistent management of these managed elements, independent of their manufacturer or provider.
The NIEM data model contains over 12,000 elements and represents over a dozen domains; subsets allows users developing an IEPD to select only what they need based on the specific requirements of the exchange. With this tool users can: Search and explore the NIEM data model. Build a schema subset containing the components required by the exchange.