A multisite comparison using electronic health records and natural language processing to identify the association between suicidality and hospital readmission amongst patients with eating disorders

Author:

Cliffe Charlotte12ORCID,Cusick Marika34,Vellupillai Sumithra1,Shear Matthew56,Downs Johnny27,Epstein Sophie27,Pathak Jyotishman3,Dutta Rina12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience King's College London London UK

2. South London & Maudsley Foundation NHS Trust London UK

3. Division of Population Health Sciences Cornell University New York New York USA

4. Department of Health Policy, Stanford School of Medicine Stanford CA USA

5. Department of Psychiatry Weill Cornell Medicine New York New York USA

6. Psychiatry New York Presbyterian Hospital White Plains New York USA

7. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London London United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo describe and compare the association between suicidality and subsequent readmission for patients hospitalized for eating disorder treatment, within 2 years of discharge, at two large academic medical centers in two different countries.MethodsOver an 8‐year study window from January 2009 to March 2017, we identified all inpatient eating disorder admissions at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, USA (WCM) and South London and Maudsley Foundation NHS Trust, London, UK (SLaM). To establish each patient's—suicidality profile, we applied two natural language processing (NLP) algorithms, independently developed at the two institutions, and detected suicidality in clinical notes documented in the first week of admission. We calculated the odds ratios (OR) for any subsequent readmission within 2 years postdischarge and determined whether this was to another eating disorder unit, other psychiatric unit, a general medical hospital admission or emergency room attendance.ResultsWe identified 1126 and 420 eating disorder inpatient admissions at WCM and SLaM, respectively. In the WCM cohort, evidence of above average suicidality during the first week of admission was significantly associated with an increased risk of noneating disorder‐related psychiatric readmission (OR 3.48 95% CI = 2.03–5.99, p‐value < .001), but a similar pattern was not observed in the SLaM cohort (OR 1.34, 95% CI = 0.75–2.37, p = .32), there was no significant increase in risk of admission. In both cohorts, personality disorder increased the risk of any psychiatric readmission within 2 years.DiscussionPatterns of increased risk of psychiatric readmission from above average suicidality detected via NLP during inpatient eating disorder admissions differed in our two patient cohorts. However, comorbid diagnoses such as personality disorder increased the risk of any psychiatric readmission across both cohorts.Public SignificanceSuicidality amongst is eating disorders is an extremely common presentation and it is important we further our understanding of identifying those most at risk. This research also provides a novel study design, comparing two NLP algorithms on electronic health record data based in the United States and United Kingdom on eating disorder inpatients. Studies researching both UK and US mental health patients are sparse therefore this study provides novel data.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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