Organisations that own stock can contract out the management of that stock to another organisation. This relationship is often referred to as a parent/child relationship. This is a useful analogy as a parent can have multiple children, and a child can have many parents. A child organisation can also be a parent, and a parent organisation can also be a child organisation:
Organisations that own stock can contract out the management of that stock to another organisation. This relationship is often referred to as a parent/child relationship. This is a useful analogy as a parent can have multiple children, and a child can have many parents. A child organisation can also be a parent, and a parent organisation can also be a child organisation:
The case logs that a user can see depends on their role:
The case logs that a user can see depends on their role:
- Customer Support users can access any case log
- Customer Support users can access any case log
- Data coordinators can access any case log for which the organisation they work for is ultimately responsible for, meaning they can see logs managed by a child organisation
- Data coordinators can access any case log for which the organisation they work for is ultimately responsible for, meaning they can see logs managed by a child organisation
- Data providers can only access case logs for which their organisation manages (or directly owns)
- Data providers can only access case logs for which their organisation manages (or directly owns)
Taking the relationships from the above diagram, and looking at which logs each user can access:
Taking the relationships from the above diagram, and looking at which logs each user can access: