The model RegisteredSubject
is used by the Edc as the master subject registration table. Only one record may exist per individual. The table has space for PII so typically a RegisteredSubject
instance is created or updated on completion of the informed consent. As always, PII in the Edc is encrypted at rest using django-crypto-field
.
Declare RegisteredSubject
in your app using the RegisteredSubjectModelMixin
, for example:
class RegisteredSubject(RegisteredSubjectModelMixin, BaseUuidModel):
class Meta:
app_label = 'my_app'
then in edc_registration
AppConfig specify the app_label = 'my_app'
so that other modules in the Edc can find the model class. (Note: The model_name is assumed to always be RegisteredSubject
).
Other modules can find the model class by accessing the AppConfig:
>>> from django.apps import apps as django_apps
>>> RegisteredSubject = django_apps.get_app_config('edc_registration').model
>>> RegisteredSubject.objects.get(subject_identifier='12345678-9')
<RegisteredSubject: 12345678-9>
RegisteredSubject
is never edited directly by the user. Instead some other model with the needed attributes is used as a proxy. To have a model perform the task of creating or updating RegisteredSubject
, declare it with the UpdatesOrCreatesRegistrationModelMixin
.
For example, a model, SubjectEligibility
or a screening model creates or updates a RegisteredSubject
without a subject identifier then a model such as the SubjectConsent
in tests.models
, also creates or updates a subject's RegisteredSubject
instance on save. For this to happen, both models are declared with the UpdatesOrCreatesRegistrationModelMixin
:
class SubjectEligibility(UniqueSubjectIdentifierModelMixin, UpdatesOrCreatesRegistrationModelMixin, BaseUuidModel):
screening_identifier = models.CharField(
max_length=36,
null=True,
unique=True)
@property
def registration_unique_field(self):
return 'screening_identifier'
def update_subject_identifier_on_save(self):
"""Overridden to not set the subject identifier on save.
"""
if not self.subject_identifier:
self.subject_identifier = self.subject_identifier_as_pk.hex
self.subject_identifier_aka = self.subject_identifier_as_pk.hex
return self.subject_identifier
class SubjectConsent(ConsentModelMixin, UpdatesOrCreatesRegistrationModelMixin, CreateAppointmentsMixin,
IdentityFieldsMixin, ReviewFieldsMixin, PersonalFieldsMixin,
CitizenFieldsMixin, VulnerabilityFieldsMixin, BaseUuidModel):
@property
def registration_unique_field(self):
return 'screening_identifier'
class Meta:
app_label = 'my_app'
The property registration_unique_field
returns a model attribute that is used to set a registration identifier on RegisteredSubject
.
A subject's RegisteredSubject
instance is created and updated in a post_save
signal. As mentioned, it is never edited directly by the user.
For the signal to be registered you need to add the AppConfig to your INSTALLED_APPS:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
....
'edc_registration.apps.AppConfig',
....
)
However, since RegisteredSubject
is not a model in edc_registration
, you should subclass AppConfig
instead, for example:
from django.apps import AppConfig as DjangoAppConfig
from edc_registration.apps import AppConfig as EdcRegistrationAppConfigParent
class AppConfig(DjangoAppConfig):
name = 'my_app'
class EdcRegistrationAppConfig(EdcRegistrationAppConfigParent):
app_label = 'my_app'
and update settings accordingly:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
....
'my_app.apps.EdcRegistrationAppConfig',
'my_app.apps.AppConfig',
....
)
Since the app_label
of the model class RegisteredSubject
is not known when the models classes are loaded, it is difficult to include the class as a foreign key. As a work around, use the RegisteredSubjectMixin
. When this mixin is declared on your model, the subject_identifier
field is added to the model and verified against RegisteredSubject
on each save.
The subject_identifier
field is added with editable=False
. You must provide the correct subject identifier programmatically or the model will raise an RegisteredSubject.DoesNotExist
exception on save.