Negativity and Positivity in the ICU: Exploratory Development of Automated Sentiment Capture in the Electronic Health Record

Author:

Kennedy Chris J.12,Chiu Catherine3,Chapman Allyson Cook45,Gologorskaya Oksana6,Farhan Hassan7,Han Mary2,Hodgson MacGregor2,Lazzareschi Daniel2,Ashana Deepshikha8,Lee Sei910,Smith Alexander K.910,Espejo Edie9,Boscardin John910,Pirracchio Romain3,Cobert Julien311

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

2. Center for Precision Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.

3. Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

4. Critical Care and Palliative Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

5. Department of Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

6. Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

7. Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Management, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.

8. Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Duke University, Durham, NC.

9. Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

10. Geriatrics, Palliative, and Extended Care, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA.

11. Department of Anesthesia, Anesthesia Service, San Francisco VA Health Care System, San Francisco, CA.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To develop proof-of-concept algorithms using alternative approaches to capture provider sentiment in ICU notes. DESIGN: Retrospective observational cohort study. SETTING: The Multiparameter Intelligent Monitoring of Intensive Care III (MIMIC-III) and the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) deidentified notes databases. PATIENTS: Adult (≥18 yr old) patients admitted to the ICU. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We developed two sentiment models: 1) a keywords-based approach using a consensus-based clinical sentiment lexicon comprised of 72 positive and 103 negative phrases, including negations and 2) a Decoding-enhanced Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers with disentangled attention-v3-based deep learning model (keywords-independent) trained on clinical sentiment labels. We applied the models to 198,944 notes across 52,997 ICU admissions in the MIMIC-III database. Analyses were replicated on an external sample of patients admitted to a UCSF ICU from 2018 to 2019. We also labeled sentiment in 1,493 note fragments and compared the predictive accuracy of our tools to three popular sentiment classifiers. Clinical sentiment terms were found in 99% of patient visits across 88% of notes. Our two sentiment tools were substantially more predictive (Spearman correlations of 0.62–0.84, p values < 0.00001) of labeled sentiment compared with general language algorithms (0.28–0.46). CONCLUSION: Our exploratory healthcare-specific sentiment models can more accurately detect positivity and negativity in clinical notes compared with general sentiment tools not designed for clinical usage.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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