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Journal Article

Citation

Zhu VJ, Walker TD, Warren RW, Jenny PB, Meystre S, Lenert LA. AMIA Annu. Symp. Proc. 2017; 2017: 1923-1930.

Affiliation

Biomedical Informatics Center at Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, American Medical Informatics Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

29854264

Abstract

Quality reporting that relies on coded administrative data alone may not completely and accurately depict providers' performance. To assess this concern with a test case, we developed and evaluated a natural language processing (NLP) approach to identify falls risk screenings documented in clinical notes of patients without coded falls risk screening data. Extracting information from 1,558 clinical notes (mainly progress notes) from 144 eligible patients, we generated a lexicon of 38 keywords relevant to falls risk screening, 26 terms for pre-negation, and 35 terms for post-negation. The NLP algorithm identified 62 (out of the 144) patients who falls risk screening documented only in clinical notes and not coded. Manual review confirmed 59 patients as true positives and 77 patients as true negatives. Our NLP approach scored 0.92 for precision, 0.95 for recall, and 0.93 for F-measure. These results support the concept of utilizing NLP to enhance healthcare quality reporting.


Language: en

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