ORCID
- Zhou, Shang-Ming: 0000-0002-0719-9353
Abstract
(1) Background: This study investigates influential risk factors for predicting 30-day readmission to hospital for Campylobacter infections (CI). (2) Methods: We linked general practitioner and hospital admission records of 13,006 patients with CI in Wales (1990–2015). An approach called TF-zR (term frequency-zRelevance) technique was presented to evaluates how relevant a clinical term is to a patient in a cohort characterized by coded health records. The zR is a supervised term-weighting metric to assign weight to a term based on relative frequencies of the term across different classes. Cost-sensitive classifier with swarm optimization and weighted subset learning was integrated to identify influential clinical signals as predictors and optimal model for readmission prediction. (3) Results: From a pool of up to 17,506 variables, 33 most predictive factors were identified, including age, gender, Townsend deprivation quintiles, comorbidities, medications, and procedures. The predictive model predicted readmission with 73% sensitivity and 54% specificity. Variables associated with readmission included male gender, recurrent tonsillitis, non-healing open wounds, operation for in-gown toenails. Cystitis, paracetamol/codeine use, age (21–25), and heliclear triple pack use, were associated with a lower risk of readmission. (4) Conclusions: This study gives a profile of clustered variables that are predictive of readmission associated with campylobacteriosis.
DOI
10.3390/jpm12010086
Publication Date
2022-01-10
Publication Title
Journal of Personalized Medicine
Volume
12
Issue
1
Embargo Period
2022-02-26
Organisational Unit
School of Nursing and Midwifery
Recommended Citation
Zhou, S. M., Lyons, R., Rahman, M., Holborow, A., & Brophy, S. (2022) 'Predicting Hospital Readmission for Campylobacteriosis from Electronic Health Records: A Machine Learning and Text Mining Perspective', Journal of Personalized Medicine, 12(1). Available at: https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12010086