• Emerg Med Australas · Aug 2023

    Early prediction of hospital admission of emergency department patients.

    • Kartik Kishore, George Braitberg, Natasha E Holmes, and Rinaldo Bellomo.
    • Data Analytics Research and Evaluation Centre, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
    • Emerg Med Australas. 2023 Aug 1; 35 (4): 572588572-588.

    ObjectiveThe early prediction of hospital admission is important to ED patient management. Using available electronic data, we aimed to develop a predictive model for hospital admission.MethodsWe analysed all presentations to the ED of a tertiary referral centre over 7 years. To our knowledge, our data set of nearly 600 000 presentations is the largest reported. Using demographic, clinical, socioeconomic, triage, vital signs, pathology data and keywords in electronic notes, we trained a machine learning (ML) model with presentations from 2015 to 2020 and evaluated it on a held-out data set from 2021 to mid-2022. We assessed electronic medical records (EMRs) data at patient arrival (baseline), 30, 60, 120 and 240 min after ED presentation.ResultsThe training data set included 424 354 data points and the validation data set 53 403. We developed and trained a binary classifier to predict inpatient admission. On a held-out test data set of 121 258 data points, we predicted admission with 86% accuracy within 30 min of ED presentation with 94% discrimination. All models for different time points from ED presentation produced an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) ≥0.93 for admission overall, with sensitivity/specificity/F1-scores of 0.83/0.90/0.84 for any inpatient admission at 30 min after presentation and 0.81/0.92/0.84 at baseline. The models retained lower but still high AUC levels when separated for short stay units or inpatient admissions.ConclusionWe combined available electronic data and ML technology to achieve excellent predictive performance for subsequent hospital admission. Such prediction may assist with patient flow.© 2023 The Authors. Emergency Medicine Australasia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.

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