Prediction of general medical admission length of stay with natural language processing and deep learning: a pilot study.

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2020
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Abstract
Length of stay (LOS) and discharge destination predictions are key parts of the discharge planning process for general medical hospital inpatients. It is possible that machine learning, using natural language processing, may be able to assist with accurate LOS and discharge destination prediction for this patient group. Emergency department triage and doctor notes were retrospectively collected on consecutive general medical and acute medical unit admissions to a single tertiary hospital from a 2-month period in 2019. These data were used to assess the feasibility of predicting LOS and discharge destination using natural language processing and a variety of machine learning models. 313 patients were included in the study. The artificial neural network achieved the highest accuracy on the primary outcome of predicting whether a patient would remain in hospital for > 2 days (accuracy 0.82, area under the received operator curve 0.75, sensitivity 0.47 and specificity 0.97). When predicting LOS as an exact number of days, the artificial neural network achieved a mean absolute error of 2.9 and a mean squared error of 16.8 on the test set. For the prediction of home as a discharge destination (vs any non-home alternative), all models performed similarly with an accuracy of approximately 0.74. This study supports the feasibility of using natural language processing to predict general medical inpatient LOS and discharge destination. Further research is indicated with larger, more detailed, datasets from multiple centres to optimise and examine the accuracy that may be achieved with such predictions.
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bacchi2020predictioninternal Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Bacchi, Stephen;Gluck, Samuel;Tan, Yiran;Chim, Ivana;Cheng, Joy;Gilbert, Toby;Menon, David K;Jannes, Jim;Kleinig, Timothy;Koblar, Simon;
Journal internal and emergency medicine
Year 2020
DOI 10.1007/s11739-019-02265-3
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