Approaches to Extracting Patterns of Service Utilization for Patients with Complex Conditions: Graph Community Detection vs. Natural Language Processing Clustering

Author:

Bambi Jonas1ORCID,Sadri Hanieh2,Moselle Ken3,Chang Ernie4,Santoso Yudi2,Howie Joseph2ORCID,Rudnick Abraham5ORCID,Elliott Lloyd T.6,Kuo Alex1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Information Science, Faculties of Human and Social Development, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

2. Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

3. Department of Clinical Psychology, Faculty of Social Science, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

4. Independent Researcher, Victoria, BC V9C 4B1, Canada

5. Departments of Psychiatry and Bioethics, School of Occupational Therapy, Faculties of Medicine and Health, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada

6. Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, Faculty of Science, Burnaby Campus, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada

Abstract

Background: As patients interact with a healthcare service system, patterns of service utilization (PSUs) emerge. These PSUs are embedded in the sparse high-dimensional space of longitudinal cross-continuum health service encounter data. Once extracted, PSUs can provide quality assurance/quality improvement (QA/QI) efforts with the information required to optimize service system structures and functions. This may improve outcomes for complex patients with chronic diseases. Method: Working with longitudinal cross-continuum encounter data from a regional health service system, various pattern detection analyses were conducted, employing (1) graph community detection algorithms, (2) natural language processing (NLP) clustering, and (3) a hybrid NLP–graph method. Result: These approaches produced similar PSUs, as determined from a clinical perspective by clinical subject matter experts and service system operations experts. Conclusions: The similarity in the results provides validation for the methodologies. Moreover, the results stress the need to engage with clinical or service system operations experts, both in providing the taxonomies and ontologies of the service system, the cohort definitions, and determining the level of granularity that produces the most clinically meaningful results. Finally, the uniqueness of each approach provides an opportunity to take advantage of the various analytical capabilities that each approach brings, which will be further explored in our future research.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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