Nursing notes may tell whether ICU patients will survive: Study

Press Trust of India  |  Toronto 

Sentiments in the notes of care providers are good indicators of whether (ICU) patients will survive, a study has found.

These scores include lab results, vital signs, and physiological and demographic characteristics gathered within 24 hours of admission.

"The physiological information collected in those first 24 hours of a patient's ICU stay is really good at predicting 30-day mortality," said Joel Dubin, an at the in Canada.

"But maybe we shouldn't just focus on the objective components of a patient's status. It turns out that there is some added predictive value to including notes as opposed to excluding them," said Dubin.

The researchers used the large publicly available (ICU) database, Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care III, containing patient data between 2001 and 2012.

The dataset used in the analysis included details about more than 27,000 patients, as well as the notes.

The researchers applied an to extract adjectives in the text to establish whether it is a positive, neutral or negative statement.

A multiple logistic regression model was then fit to the data to show a relationship between the measured sentiment and 30-day mortality while controlling for gender, type of ICU, and simplified acute physiology score.

The sentiment analysis provided a noticeable improvement for predicting 30-day mortality in the of patients.

There was also a clear difference between the patients with the most positive messages who experienced the highest survival rates and the patients with the most negative messages who experienced the lowest survival rates.

"Mortality is not the only outcome that nursing notes could potentially predict. They might also be used to predict readmission, or recovery from while in the ICU," said Dubin.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 16 2018. 17:20 IST