3. Mapping Checklist
To run the Tuva Project on a new data source you need to map that data to the Tuva input layer. Once this is done, the Tuva Project (which is a dbt package) will be able to call the input layer tables using ref statements and build the Tuva data model on your data. Mapping a data source to the Tuva input layer means creating dbt models in your dbt project for each of the input layer tables. That means that if you have a claims data source you will create dbt models for each of the 3 claims input tables, and if you have a clinical data source you will create dbt models for each of the 9 clinical input tables.
In practice this is typically done in a dbt project where you have:
- Raw data tables as sources (left side of the DAG).
- However many necessary intermediate transformation tables as dbt models (middle of the DAG).
- The Tuva input layer tables as dbt models (right side of the DAG). Keep in mind that these models will be called by ref statements in the Tuva Project, so in your dbt project you must name them with the correct corresponding Tuva input layer table names (i.e., the names the input layer tables have here).
If your data source doesn't have every field in the input layer, that's okay. Just map the fields that you have and leave the other fields empty (you still need to create all the claims input tables for claims data sources and all the clinical input tables for clinical data sources, and those tables need to have all their columns, even if some or all of the columns on a table are filled with null values). To see which fields are required for a given data mart check out the docs for that data mart in this section.
Below we provide a Mapping Checklist of things that are important to get right in mapping.
Claims Input Layer
medical_claim
Primary Key: Composite primary key made up of
claim_id
, and claim_line_number
.
Note that when unioning data from multiple data sources, the
medical_claim
table could have collisions of claim_id
values
coming from different data sources, but since we always map one data source at a time
to the Tuva input layer (and we only run the mapping audit for
one data source at a time), you only need to make sure that
claim_id
and claim_line_number
are unique and populated for all rows you map
from your data source, and that is what the mapping audit will check for.
The medical_claim
table is where all institutional and professional medical
claims go. This table is at the claim line grain, so there is one row
for each claim line and therefore there may be multiple rows for each claim.
This table must be created as a dbt model named medical_claim
in your dbt project.
If there are claims in the dataset without corresponding eligibility
(i.e. the patient the claim is for does not have coverage during the
dates for the claim)
then those claims should stay in the dataset and not be
filtered out. These claims are often excluded from financial
analysis. In fact, the Financial PMPM mart inner joins medical_claim
and
eligibility
to filter out claims without
corresponding eligibility.
However, this is not the only use of claims data, so we
do not filter out these claims by default.
When mapping claims to the medical_claim
input layer table, you must take into
account any logic (specific to your data source) to deal with
adjustments, denials, and reversals. The claims that must end up
in the input layer medical_claim
table should be the final claims that remain
after adjustments, denials, and reversals have been taken into account.
Below is a list of all fields in the medical_claim
table with things to keep in
mind when mapping data to each of those fields.
claim_id
This is a string that links each row in the table to the unique claim
to which it belongs.
Keep in mind that the medical_claim
table is at the claim line grain, i.e.
each row in the table corresponds to a unique claim line. If a given claim
has N lines, there are N lines in the medical_claim
table with the same
claim_id
value (one for each line in the claim). The claim_id
value
is required to be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the medical_claim
table has
a populated claim_id.
claim_line_number
This is a positive integer that identifies the claim line that a given
row on the table represents.
The values of claim_line_number
for a given
claim_id
must be sequential positive integers starting at 1.
For example, if claim_id
= 'ABC'
has 4 claim lines (i.e., 4 rows on the
medical_claim
table), those 4 rows must have claim_line_number
equal to
1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The claim_line_number
field should
be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
The mapping audit checks that the values of claim_line_number
are different
for all lines within the same claim.
claim_type
This field is a string that describes the type of claim
and must have one of the following 3 values: 'institutional',
'professional', or 'undetermined'. This is a header-level field, so
its value must be the same
for all lines in a given claim. This field should be populated
for every row in the medical_claim
table.
The logic to populate this field is as follows:
- A claim is said to be 'institutional' if it has any of these 7 fields populated:
bill_type_code
,ms_drg_code
,apr_drg_code
,admit_type_code
,admit_source_code
,discharge_disposition_code
,revenue_center_code
. Note that we are only requiring that at least one of those fields is populated, not that it is populated with a valid value. - A claim is said to be 'professional' if none of the 7 fields above (
bill_type_code
,ms_drg_code
,apr_drg_code
,admit_type_code
,admit_source_code
,discharge_disposition_code
,revenue_center_code
) are populated AND it has at least one populatedplace_of_service_code
. Note that we only require that at least oneplace_of_service_code
is populated, not that it is populated with a valid value. - If neither of the above two bullets is the case, the claim is said to be 'undetermined'
The mapping audit checks that every row in the medical_claim
table
has a populated claim_type
from one of the accepted values
for this field ('institutional', 'professional', 'undetermined')
and that the value of this field is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
member_id
This field is a string that links each row to a given member.
This field should be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
It is a header-level field,
so its value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the medical_claim
table
has a populated member_id
and that
the value of this field is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
plan
This field is a string that links every row to
the name of the health plan.
This field should be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
It is a header-level field,
so its value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the medical_claim
table
has a populated plan
and that
the value of this field is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
claim_start_date, claim_end_date
These fields are dates formatted in the form YYYY-MM-DD. They represent
the start/end dates for the claim.
They should be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
They are header-level fields,
so their value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that the values of claim_start_date
and claim_end_date
are consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
admission_date, discharge_date
These fields are dates formatted in the form YYYY-MM-DD. They represent the admission/discharge dates for the claim. They are only populated for inpatient claims and are header-level fields, so their value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that
the value of each of these fields is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
discharge_disposition_code
This field is a two-character string that represents one of the standard discharge disposition code values. This field should be populated for all institutional claims and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same for all rows in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that
the value of this field is a two-character string and that it is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
place_of_service_code
This field is a two-character string that represents one of the standard place of service code values. This field should be populated for professional claims and is a line-level field, so its value may be different for different lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that the value of this field is a two-character string. The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
bill_type_code
This field is a three-character string that represents one of the standard bill type code values. Note that this field may have a leading zero in your raw data source (making it a four-character string), and when this is the case we remove the leading zero when mapping to the input layer. This field should be populated for all institutional claims and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same for all rows in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that
the value of this field is a three-character string and that it is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
ms_drg_code
This field is a three-character string that represents one of the standard MS-DRG values. This field is only populated for a subset of institutional claims and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same for all rows in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that
the value of this field is a three-character string and that it is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
apr_drg_code
This field is a three-character string that represents one of the standard APR-DRG values. This field is only populated for a subset of institutional claims and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same for all rows in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that
the value of this field is a three-character string and that it is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
revenue_center_code
This field is a four-character string that represents one of the standard revenue center code values. This field should be populated for institutional claims and is a line-level field, so its value may be different for different lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that the value of this field is a four-character string. The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
diagnosis_code_type
This field is a string that describes the type of ICD diagnosis codes
used on this claim. It must have one of the following two values:
'icd-9-cm' or 'icd-10-cm'.
This is a header-level field, so
its value must be the same
for all lines in a given claim. This field should be populated
for every row in the medical_claim
table that has diagnosis codes.
The mapping audit checks that claims with at least one
populated diagnosis code have a populated diagnosis_code_type
from one of the accepted values
('icd-9-cm', 'icd-10-cm')
and that the value of this field is consistent across
all lines for the claim.
diagnosis_code_1, diagnosis_code2, ... , diagnosis_code_25
These fields are strings with the standard ICD diagnosis
codes representing the diagnoses present on the claim.
When mapping to the Tuva input layer we strip any decimal points
from the diagnosis codes. These are header-level fields, so
their values must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
Only the diagnosis codes available on any given claim will be populated.
For example, if a claim only has diagnosis_code_1
and diagnosis_code_2
available, only those fields will be populated and the values of the other diagnosis
code fields will be left null.
The mapping audit checks that the value of each diagnosis code field
is consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the values of these fields are
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
procedure_code_type
This field is a string that describes the type of ICD procedure codes
used on this claim. It must have one of the following two values:
'icd-9-pcs' or 'icd-10-pcs'.
This is a header-level field, so
its value must be the same
for all lines in a given claim. This field should be populated
for every row in the medical_claim
table that has procedure codes.
The mapping audit checks that claims with at least one
populated procedure code have a populated procedure_code_type
from one of the accepted values
('icd-9-pcs', 'icd-10-pcs')
and that the value of this field is consistent across
all lines for the claim.
procedure_code_1, procedure_code2, ... , procedure_code_25
These fields are strings with the standard ICD procedure
codes representing the procedures present on the claim.
When mapping to the Tuva input layer we strip any decimal points
from the procedure codes. These are header-level fields, so
their values must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
Only the procedure codes available on any given claim will be populated.
For example, if a claim only has procedure_code_1
and procedure_code_2
available, only those fields will be populated and the of the procedure
code fields will be left null.
The mapping audit checks that the value of each procedure code field
is consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
data_source
This field is a user-defined string that indicates
the data source. This string is typically named after the payer
and state, for example, "BDBS Tennessee".
This field should be populated for every line in the medical_claim
table
and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same
for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks every row in the medical_claim
table
has a populated data_source
and that the value of this field
is consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
pharmacy_claim
Primary Key: Composite primary key made up of
claim_id
, and claim_line_number
.
The pharmacy_claim
table stores all pharmacy claims.
There is one row for each claim line, therefore multiple rows for
each claim. Each row (claim line) represents a specific medication
that was dispensed, so each row must have its own ncd_code
.
This table must be created as a dbt model named pharmacy_claim
in your dbt project.
If there are claims in the dataset without corresponding eligibility (i.e. the patient the claim is for does not have coverage during the dates for the claim) then those claims should stay in the dataset and not be filtered out.
When mapping claims to the pharmacy_claim
input layer table, you must take into
account any logic (specific to your data source) to deal with
adjustments, denials, and reversals. The claims that must end up
in the input layer pharmacy_claim
table should be the final claims that remain
after adjustments, denials, and reversals have been taken into account.
Below is a list of all fields in the pharmacy_claim
table with things to keep in
mind when mapping data to each of those fields.
claim_id
This is a string that links each row in the table to the unique claim
to which it belongs.
Keep in mind that the pharmacy_claim
table is at the claim line grain, i.e.
each row in the table corresponds to a unique claim line. If a given claim
has N lines, there are N lines in the pharmacy_claim
table with the same
claim_id
value (one for each line in the claim). The claim_id
value
is required to be populated for every row in the medical_claim
table.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the pharmacy_claim
table has
a populated claim_id.
claim_line_number
This is a positive integer that identifies the claim line that a given
row on the table represents.
The values of claim_line_number
for a given
claim_id
must be sequential positive integers starting at 1.
For example, if claim_id
= 'ABC'
has 4 claim lines (i.e., 4 rows on the
pharmacy_claim
table), those 4 rows must have claim_line_number
equal to
1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The claim_line_number
field should
be populated for every row in the pharmacy_claim
table.
The mapping audit checks that the values of claim_line_number
are different
for all lines within the same claim.
member_id
This field is a string that links each row to a given member.
This field should be populated for every row in the pharmacy_claim
table.
It is a header-level field,
so its value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the pharmacy_claim
table
has a populated member_id
and that
the value of this field is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
plan
This field is a string that links every row to
the name of the health plan.
This field should be populated for every row in the pharmacy_claim
table.
It is a header-level field,
so its value must be the same for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that every row in the pharmacy_claim
table
has a populated plan
and that
the value of this field is
consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
ndc_code
This field represents the National Drug Code (NDC) for the
actual drug being dispensed. Each line on a pharmacy claim represents
a drug that was dispensed, so each line must have an ndc_code
.
NDC codes are written as a 10-digit number on drug packaging, but
an additional digit is usually added when billing an NDC on a healthcare claim,
making the NDC have 11 digits on pharmacy claims. If your raw data has 10-digit
NDC codes, you must add a '0' to the code to make it 11 digits when
mapping to the pharmacy_claim
input layer table. The 11-digit number follows
a 5-4-2 format, i.e. 5 digits in the first segment,
4 digits in the second segment,
and 2 digits in the third segment.
The rules for which segment the additional digit is added to are as follows:
- 4-4-2 becomes 5-4-2
- 5-3-2 becomes 5-4-2
- 5-4-1 becomes 5-4-2
Essentially you add a leading zero to whichever segment needs it.
If your 10-digit codes are not separated into segments by dashes,
it is impossible to know where to add the extra '0' and so you cannot
accurately turn your code into an 11-digit code and can therefore not
map it to the pharmacy_claim
input layer table.
Whether your raw data has 11-digit NDC codes or 10-digit codes that you may successfully
convert to 11-digit codes, you must remove the dashes in the code when
mapping to the pharmacy_claim
input layer table.
The ndc_code
field should should always be populated with 11-character strings.
The mapping audit checks that the ndc_code
field is always populated
and that it always has the correct length (11 characters).
The mapping audit does not check whether the value of this field is a
valid value from terminology because if your raw data has invalid
values you will map them to the input layer and Tuva's data quality
intelligence will point out invalid values downstream from the input layer.
quantity
This field represents the number of doses of the medication. This should always be a positive integer.
The mapping audit checks that when this field is populated it is a positive integer.
days_supply
This field represents the number of days supply for the medicaiton. This should always be a positive integer.
The mapping audit checks that when this field is populated it is a positive integer.
refills
This field represents the number of refills for the prescription. This should always be a positive integer.
The mapping audit checks that when this field is populated it is a positive integer.
in_network_flag
This field is a flag indicating if the claim was in (=1) or out (=0) of network. The value of this fields should always be 0 or 1, and it should be unique across all lines of a given claim.
The mapping audit checks that this field is unique across all lines for a given claim and it also checks that only valid values (0 or 1) are populated for this field.
data_source
This field is a user-defined string that indicates
the data source. This string is typically named after the payer
and state, for example, "BDBS Tennessee".
This field should be populated for every line in the pharmacy_claim
table
and is a header-level field, so its value must be the same
for all lines in a given claim.
The mapping audit checks every row in the pharmacy_claim
table
has a populated data_source
and that the value of this field
is consistent across all lines for a given claim_id
.
eligibility
Primary Key
- The primary key for the pharmacy_claim table is patient_id, enrollment_start_date, enrollment_end_date, and data_source.
- There are two commonly used data formats for eligibility (also known as enrollment) data: the eligibility span format and the member month format.
- The eligibility span format has one record per member eligibility span. An eligibility span is a time period when a member was enrolled with and therefore had insurance coverage by a health plan. An eligibility span has a start date and an end date. A person can have multiple eligibility spans.
- The member month format has one record per member per month of enrollment. For example, a person with a single eligibility span from 1/1/2020 through 3/31/2020 would have a single eligibility span record, but 3 member month records, one for each month.
- The eligibility table follows the eligibility span format.