Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data

Abstract Background Patients who exceed their expected length of stay in the hospital come at a cost to stakeholders in the healthcare sector as bed spaces are limited for new patients, nosocomial infections increase and the outcome for many patients is hampered due to multimorbidity after hospitali...

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Main Authors: Chinedu I. Ossai, David Rankin, Nilmini Wickramasinghe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2022-07-01
Series:European Journal of Medical Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-022-00754-4
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author Chinedu I. Ossai
David Rankin
Nilmini Wickramasinghe
author_facet Chinedu I. Ossai
David Rankin
Nilmini Wickramasinghe
author_sort Chinedu I. Ossai
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Patients who exceed their expected length of stay in the hospital come at a cost to stakeholders in the healthcare sector as bed spaces are limited for new patients, nosocomial infections increase and the outcome for many patients is hampered due to multimorbidity after hospitalization. Objectives This paper develops a technique for predicting Extended Length of Hospital Stay (ELOHS) at preadmission and their risk factors using hospital data. Methods A total of 91,468 records of patient’s hospital information from a private acute teaching hospital were used for developing a machine learning algorithm relaying on Recursive Feature Elimination with Cross-Validation and Extra Tree Classifier (RFECV-ETC). The study implemented Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) and tenfold cross-validation to determine the optimal features for predicting ELOHS while relying on multivariate Logistic Regression (LR) for computing the risk factors and the Relative Risk (RR) of ELOHS at a 95% confidence level. Results An estimated 11.54% of the patients have ELOHS, which increases with patient age as patients < 18 years, 18–40 years, 40–65 years and ≥ 65 years, respectively, have 2.57%, 4.33%, 8.1%, and 15.18% ELOHS rates. The RFECV-ETC algorithm predicted preadmission ELOHS to an accuracy of 89.3%. Age is a predominant risk factors of ELOHS with patients who are > 90 years—PAG (> 90) {RR: 1.85 (1.34–2.56), P:  < 0.001} having 6.23% and 23.3%, respectively, higher likelihood of ELOHS than patient 80–90 years old—PAG (80–90) {RR: 1.74 (1.34–2.38), P:  < 0.001} and those 70–80 years old—PAG (70–80) {RR: 1.5 (1.1–2.05), P: 0.011}. Those from admission category—ADC (US1) {RR: 3.64 (3.09–4.28, P:  < 0.001} are 14.8% and 70.5%, respectively, more prone to ELOHS compared to ADC (UC1) {RR: 3.17 (2.82–3.55), P:  < 0.001} and ADC (EMG) {RR: 2.11 (1.93–2.31), P:  < 0.001}. Patients from SES (low) {RR: 1.45 (1.24–1.71), P:  < 0.001)} are 13.3% and 45% more susceptible to those from SES (middle) and SES (high). Admission type (ADT) such as AS2, M2, NEWS, S2 and others {RR: 1.37–2.77 (1.25–6.19), P:  < 0.001} also have a high likelihood of contributing to ELOHS while the distance to hospital (DTH) {RR: 0.64–0.75 (0.56–0.82), P:  < 0.001}, Charlson Score (CCI) {RR: 0.31–0.68 (0.22–0.99), P:  < 0.001–0.043} and some VMO specialties {RR: 0.08–0.69 (0.03–0.98), P:  < 0.001–0.035} have limited influence on ELOHS. Conclusions Relying on the preadmission assessment of ELOHS helps identify those patients who are susceptible to exceeding their expected length of stay on admission, thus, making it possible to improve patients’ management and outcomes.
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spelling doaj.art-97d8b7a444ca4fb6938bddb0c684f16e2022-12-22T02:06:58ZengBMCEuropean Journal of Medical Research2047-783X2022-07-0127111610.1186/s40001-022-00754-4Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific dataChinedu I. Ossai0David Rankin1Nilmini Wickramasinghe2School of Health Sciences, Department of Health and Biostatistics, Swinburne UniversityCabrini HealthSchool of Health Sciences, Department of Health and Biostatistics, Swinburne UniversityAbstract Background Patients who exceed their expected length of stay in the hospital come at a cost to stakeholders in the healthcare sector as bed spaces are limited for new patients, nosocomial infections increase and the outcome for many patients is hampered due to multimorbidity after hospitalization. Objectives This paper develops a technique for predicting Extended Length of Hospital Stay (ELOHS) at preadmission and their risk factors using hospital data. Methods A total of 91,468 records of patient’s hospital information from a private acute teaching hospital were used for developing a machine learning algorithm relaying on Recursive Feature Elimination with Cross-Validation and Extra Tree Classifier (RFECV-ETC). The study implemented Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) and tenfold cross-validation to determine the optimal features for predicting ELOHS while relying on multivariate Logistic Regression (LR) for computing the risk factors and the Relative Risk (RR) of ELOHS at a 95% confidence level. Results An estimated 11.54% of the patients have ELOHS, which increases with patient age as patients < 18 years, 18–40 years, 40–65 years and ≥ 65 years, respectively, have 2.57%, 4.33%, 8.1%, and 15.18% ELOHS rates. The RFECV-ETC algorithm predicted preadmission ELOHS to an accuracy of 89.3%. Age is a predominant risk factors of ELOHS with patients who are > 90 years—PAG (> 90) {RR: 1.85 (1.34–2.56), P:  < 0.001} having 6.23% and 23.3%, respectively, higher likelihood of ELOHS than patient 80–90 years old—PAG (80–90) {RR: 1.74 (1.34–2.38), P:  < 0.001} and those 70–80 years old—PAG (70–80) {RR: 1.5 (1.1–2.05), P: 0.011}. Those from admission category—ADC (US1) {RR: 3.64 (3.09–4.28, P:  < 0.001} are 14.8% and 70.5%, respectively, more prone to ELOHS compared to ADC (UC1) {RR: 3.17 (2.82–3.55), P:  < 0.001} and ADC (EMG) {RR: 2.11 (1.93–2.31), P:  < 0.001}. Patients from SES (low) {RR: 1.45 (1.24–1.71), P:  < 0.001)} are 13.3% and 45% more susceptible to those from SES (middle) and SES (high). Admission type (ADT) such as AS2, M2, NEWS, S2 and others {RR: 1.37–2.77 (1.25–6.19), P:  < 0.001} also have a high likelihood of contributing to ELOHS while the distance to hospital (DTH) {RR: 0.64–0.75 (0.56–0.82), P:  < 0.001}, Charlson Score (CCI) {RR: 0.31–0.68 (0.22–0.99), P:  < 0.001–0.043} and some VMO specialties {RR: 0.08–0.69 (0.03–0.98), P:  < 0.001–0.035} have limited influence on ELOHS. Conclusions Relying on the preadmission assessment of ELOHS helps identify those patients who are susceptible to exceeding their expected length of stay on admission, thus, making it possible to improve patients’ management and outcomes.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-022-00754-4Extended length of hospital stayRecursive feature eliminationExtra tree classifierMultivariate logistic regressionAdmission risk
spellingShingle Chinedu I. Ossai
David Rankin
Nilmini Wickramasinghe
Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
European Journal of Medical Research
Extended length of hospital stay
Recursive feature elimination
Extra tree classifier
Multivariate logistic regression
Admission risk
title Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
title_full Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
title_fullStr Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
title_full_unstemmed Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
title_short Preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with RFECV-ETC and hospital-specific data
title_sort preadmission assessment of extended length of hospital stay with rfecv etc and hospital specific data
topic Extended length of hospital stay
Recursive feature elimination
Extra tree classifier
Multivariate logistic regression
Admission risk
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-022-00754-4
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