JOURNAL ARTICLE

Predicting Inpatient Falls Using Natural Language Processing of Nursing Records Obtained From Japanese Electronic Medical Records: Case-Control Study

Hayao NakataniMasatoshi NakaoHidefumi UchiyamaHiroyoshi ToyoshibaChikayuki Ochiai

Year: 2020 Journal:   JMIR Medical Informatics Vol: 8 (4)Pages: e16970-e16970   Publisher: JMIR Publications

Abstract

Background Falls in hospitals are the most common risk factor that affects the safety of inpatients and can result in severe harm. Therefore, preventing falls is one of the most important areas of risk management for health care organizations. However, existing methods for predicting falls are laborious and costly. Objective The objective of this study is to verify whether hospital inpatient falls can be predicted through the analysis of a single input—unstructured nursing records obtained from Japanese electronic medical records (EMRs)—using a natural language processing (NLP) algorithm and machine learning. Methods The nursing records of 335 fallers and 408 nonfallers for a 12-month period were extracted from the EMRs of an acute care hospital and randomly divided into a learning data set and test data set. The former data set was subjected to NLP and machine learning to extract morphemes that contributed to separating fallers from nonfallers to construct a model for predicting falls. Then, the latter data set was used to determine the predictive value of the model using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Results The prediction of falls using the test data set showed high accuracy, with an area under the ROC curve, sensitivity, specificity, and odds ratio of mean 0.834 (SD 0.005), mean 0.769 (SD 0.013), mean 0.785 (SD 0.020), and mean 12.27 (SD 1.11) for five independent experiments, respectively. The morphemes incorporated into the final model included many words closely related to known risk factors for falls, such as the use of psychotropic drugs, state of consciousness, and mobility, thereby demonstrating that an NLP algorithm combined with machine learning can effectively extract risk factors for falls from nursing records. Conclusions We successfully established that falls among hospital inpatients can be predicted by analyzing nursing records using an NLP algorithm and machine learning. Therefore, it may be possible to develop a fall risk monitoring system that analyzes nursing records daily and alerts health care professionals when the fall risk of an inpatient is increased.

Keywords:
Medical record Medicine Receiver operating characteristic Artificial intelligence Test set Machine learning Odds ratio Odds Natural language processing Medical emergency Computer science Logistic regression Internal medicine

Metrics

58
Cited By
28.30
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
34
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Nursing Diagnosis and Documentation
Health Sciences →  Nursing →  Issues, ethics and legal aspects
Chronic Disease Management Strategies
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Epidemiology
Machine Learning in Healthcare
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence

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