Development and validation of a pragmatic natural language processing approach to identifying falls in older adults in the emergency department

dc.contributor.authorPatterson, Brian W.
dc.contributor.authorJacobsohn, Gwen C.
dc.contributor.authorShah, Manish N.
dc.contributor.authorSong, Yiqiang
dc.contributor.authorMaru, Apoorva
dc.contributor.authorVenkatesh, Arjun K.
dc.contributor.authorZhong, Monica
dc.contributor.authorTaylor, Katherine
dc.contributor.authorHamedani, Azita G.
dc.contributor.authorMendonça, Eneida A.
dc.contributor.departmentPediatrics, IU School of Medicineen_US
dc.date.accessioned2019-09-06T16:50:44Z
dc.date.available2019-09-06T16:50:44Z
dc.date.issued2019-07-22
dc.description.abstractBACKGROUND: Falls among older adults are both a common reason for presentation to the emergency department, and a major source of morbidity and mortality. It is critical to identify fall patients quickly and reliably during, and immediately after, emergency department encounters in order to deliver appropriate care and referrals. Unfortunately, falls are difficult to identify without manual chart review, a time intensive process infeasible for many applications including surveillance and quality reporting. Here we describe a pragmatic NLP approach to automating fall identification. METHODS: In this single center retrospective review, 500 emergency department provider notes from older adult patients (age 65 and older) were randomly selected for analysis. A simple, rules-based NLP algorithm for fall identification was developed and evaluated on a development set of 1084 notes, then compared with identification by consensus of trained abstractors blinded to NLP results. RESULTS: The NLP pipeline demonstrated a recall (sensitivity) of 95.8%, specificity of 97.4%, precision of 92.0%, and F1 score of 0.939 for identifying fall events within emergency physician visit notes, as compared to gold standard manual abstraction by human coders. CONCLUSIONS: Our pragmatic NLP algorithm was able to identify falls in ED notes with excellent precision and recall, comparable to that of more labor-intensive manual abstraction. This finding offers promise not just for improving research methods, but as a potential for identifying patients for targeted interventions, quality measure development and epidemiologic surveillance.en_US
dc.identifier.citationPatterson, B. W., Jacobsohn, G. C., Shah, M. N., Song, Y., Maru, A., Venkatesh, A. K., … Mendonça, E. A. (2019). Development and validation of a pragmatic natural language processing approach to identifying falls in older adults in the emergency department. BMC medical informatics and decision making, 19(1), 138. doi:10.1186/s12911-019-0843-7en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/20852
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.publisherBiomed Centralen_US
dc.relation.isversionof10.1186/s12911-019-0843-7en_US
dc.relation.journalBMC Medical Informatics and Decision Makingen_US
dc.sourcePMCen_US
dc.subjectFallsen_US
dc.subjectElectronic health recorden_US
dc.subjectEmergency medicineen_US
dc.subjectNatural language processingen_US
dc.subjectGeriatricsen_US
dc.titleDevelopment and validation of a pragmatic natural language processing approach to identifying falls in older adults in the emergency departmenten_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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