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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Using hospital administrative data to infer patient-patient contact via the consistent co-presence algorithm

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TLDR
A novel method is introduced that implicitly models the many complexities of patient scheduling and movement through a hospital by randomly perturbing the timing of patients’ entry time into the health care system and retains meaningful information about patient-patient interaction, which may affect outcomes relevant to health care practice.
Abstract
In health care settings, patients who are physically proximate to other patients (co-presence) for a meaningful amount of time may have differential health outcomes depending on who they are in contact with. How to best measure this co-presence, however is an open question and previous approaches have limitations that may make them inappropriate for complex health care settings. Here, we introduce a novel method which we term “consistent co-presence”, that implicitly models the many complexities of patient scheduling and movement through a hospital by randomly perturbing the timing of patients’ entry time into the health care system. This algorithm generates networks that can be employed in models of patient outcomes, such as 1-year mortality, and are preferred over previously established alternative algorithms from a model comparison perspective. These results indicate that consistent co-presence retains meaningful information about patient-patient interaction, which may affect outcomes relevant to health care practice. Furthermore, the generalizabiity of this approach allows it to be applied to a wide variety of complex systems.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A passive monitoring tool using hospital administrative data enables earlier specific detection of healthcare-acquired infections.

TL;DR: These findings show that co-presence time would help predict healthcare-acquired infection, and would do so earlier than the current standard of care.
References
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Big data analytics in healthcare: promise and potential

TL;DR: Big data analytics in healthcare is evolving into a promising field for providing insight from very large data sets and improving outcomes while reducing costs, and its potential is great; however there remain challenges to overcome.
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Dichotomizing continuous predictors in multiple regression: a bad idea.

TL;DR: It is argued that the simplicity achieved is gained at a cost; dichotomization may create rather than avoid problems, notably a considerable loss of power and residual confounding.

Can Electronic Medical Record Systems Transform Health Care

TL;DR: It is concluded that effective EMR implementation and networking could eventually save more than $81 billion annually--by improving health care efficiency and safety--and that HIT-enabled prevention and management of chronic disease could eventually double those savings while increasing health and other social benefits.
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Can Electronic Medical Record Systems Transform Health Care? Potential Health Benefits, Savings, And Costs

TL;DR: In this paper, the potential health and financial benefits of health information technology (HIT) are examined and the potential savings and costs of widespread adoption of electronic medical record (EMR) systems, models important health and safety benefits, and concludes that effective EMR implementation and networking could eventually save more than $81 billion annually.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tracking a Hospital Outbreak of Carbapenem-Resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae with Whole-Genome Sequencing

TL;DR: Tracking a hospital outbreak of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae with whole-genome sequencing revealed its origin and probable modes of transmission, and revealed the weaknesses in this medical who-done-it, informing improvements in hospital preventive measures.
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