Identifying Transitional High Cost Users from Unstructured Patient Profiles Written by Primary Care Physicians.
Pac Symp Biocomput
; 25: 127-138, 2020.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-31797592
Identification and subsequent intervention of patients at risk of becoming High Cost Users (HCUs) presents the opportunity to improve outcomes while also providing significant savings for the healthcare system. In this paper, the 2016 HCU status of patients was predicted using free-form text data from the 2015 cumulative patient profiles within the electronic medical records of family care practices in Ontario. These unstructured notes make substantial use of domain-specific spellings and abbreviations; we show that word embeddings derived from the same context provide more informative features than pre-trained ones based on Wikipedia, MIMIC, and Pubmed. We further demonstrate that a model using features derived from aggregated word embeddings (EmbEncode) provides a significant performance improvement over the bag-of-words representation (82.48±0.35% versus 81.85±0.36% held-out AUROC, p = 3.2 × 10-4), using far fewer input features (5,492 versus 214,750) and fewer non-zero coefficients (1,177 versus 4,284). The future HCUs of greatest interest are the transitional ones who are not already HCUs, because they provide the greatest scope for interventions. Predicting these new HCU is challenging because most HCUs recur. We show that removing recurrent HCUs from the training set improves the ability of EmbEncode to predict new HCUs, while only slightly decreasing its ability to predict recurrent ones.
Buscar no Google
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Médicos de Atenção Primária
Tipo de estudo:
Health_economic_evaluation
/
Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Humans
País/Região como assunto:
America do norte
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Pac Symp Biocomput
Assunto da revista:
BIOTECNOLOGIA
/
INFORMATICA MEDICA
Ano de publicação:
2020
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Canadá
País de publicação:
Estados Unidos