scholarly journals Emergency Department Online Patient-Caregiver Scheduling

Author(s):  
Hanan Rosemarin ◽  
Ariel Rosenfeld ◽  
Sarit Kraus

Emergency Departments (EDs) provide an imperative source of medical care. Central to the ED workflow is the patientcaregiver scheduling, directed at getting the right patient to the right caregiver at the right time. Unfortunately, common ED scheduling practices are based on ad-hoc heuristics which may not be aligned with the complex and partially conflicting ED's objectives. In this paper, we propose a novel online deep-learning scheduling approach for the automatic assignment and scheduling of medical personnel to arriving patients. Our approach allows for the optimization of explicit, hospital-specific multi-variate objectives and takes advantage of available data, without altering the existing workflow of the ED. In an extensive empirical evaluation, using real-world data, we show that our approach can significantly improve an ED's performance metrics.

Author(s):  
Hanan Rosemarin ◽  
Ariel Rosenfeld ◽  
Sarit Kraus

Emergency Departments (EDs) provide an imperative source of medical care. Central to the ED workflow is the patientcaregiver scheduling, directed at getting the right patient to the right caregiver at the right time. Unfortunately, common ED scheduling practices are based on ad-hoc heuristics which may not be aligned with the complex and partially conflicting ED’s objectives. In this paper, we propose a novel online deep-learning scheduling approach for the automatic assignment and scheduling of medical personnel to arriving patients. Our approach allows for the optimization of explicit, hospitalspecific multi-variate objectives and takes advantage of available data, without altering the existing workflow of the ED. In an extensive empirical evaluation, using real-world data, we show that our approach can significantly improve an ED’s performance metrics.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Horng ◽  
Nathaniel R. Greenbaum ◽  
Larry A. Nathanson ◽  
James C McClay ◽  
Foster R. Goss ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTObjectiveNumerous attempts have been made to create a standardized ‘presenting problem’ or ‘chief complaint’ list to characterize the nature of an Emergency Department visit. Previous attempts have failed to gain widespread adoption as none were freely sharable and contained the right level of specificity, structure, and clinical relevance to gain acceptance by the larger emergency medicine community. Using real-world data, we constructed a presenting problem list that addresses these challenges.Materials and MethodsWe prospectively captured the presenting problems for 180,424 consecutive emergency department patient visits at an urban, academic, Level I trauma center in the Boston metro area. No patients were excluded. We used a consensus process to iteratively derive our system using real-world data. We used the first 70% of consecutive visits to derive our ontology; followed by a 6 month washout period, and the remaining 30% for validation. All concepts were mapped to SNOMED-CT.ResultsOur system consists of a polyhierarchical ontology containing 692 unique concepts, 2,118 synonyms, and 30,613 non-visible descriptions to correct misspellings and non-standard terminology. Our ontology successfully captured structured data for 95.9% of visits in our validation dataset.Discussion and ConclusionWe present the HierArchical Presenting Problem ontologY (HaPPy). This ontology was empirically derived then iteratively validated by an expert consensus panel. HaPPy contains 692 presenting problem concepts, each concept being mapped to SNOMED-CT. This freely sharable ontology can help to facilitate presenting problem based quality metrics, research, and patient care.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 2266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaos Sideris ◽  
Georgios Bardis ◽  
Athanasios Voulodimos ◽  
Georgios Miaoulis ◽  
Djamchid Ghazanfarpour

The constantly increasing amount and availability of urban data derived from varying sources leads to an assortment of challenges that include, among others, the consolidation, visualization, and maximal exploitation prospects of the aforementioned data. A preeminent problem affecting urban planning is the appropriate choice of location to host a particular activity (either commercial or common welfare service) or the correct use of an existing building or empty space. In this paper, we propose an approach to address these challenges availed with machine learning techniques. The proposed system combines, fuses, and merges various types of data from different sources, encodes them using a novel semantic model that can capture and utilize both low-level geometric information and higher level semantic information and subsequently feeds them to the random forests classifier, as well as other supervised machine learning models for comparisons. Our experimental evaluation on multiple real-world data sets comparing the performance of several classifiers (including Feedforward Neural Networks, Support Vector Machines, Bag of Decision Trees, k-Nearest Neighbors and Naïve Bayes), indicated the superiority of Random Forests in terms of the examined performance metrics (Accuracy, Specificity, Precision, Recall, F-measure and G-mean).


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (03) ◽  
pp. 409-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Horng ◽  
Nathaniel R. Greenbaum ◽  
Larry A. Nathanson ◽  
James C. McClay ◽  
Foster R. Goss ◽  
...  

Objective Numerous attempts have been made to create a standardized “presenting problem” or “chief complaint” list to characterize the nature of an emergency department visit. Previous attempts have failed to gain widespread adoption as they were not freely shareable or did not contain the right level of specificity, structure, and clinical relevance to gain acceptance by the larger emergency medicine community. Using real-world data, we constructed a presenting problem list that addresses these challenges. Materials and Methods We prospectively captured the presenting problems for 180,424 consecutive emergency department patient visits at an urban, academic, Level I trauma center in the Boston metro area. No patients were excluded. We used a consensus process to iteratively derive our system using real-world data. We used the first 70% of consecutive visits to derive our ontology, followed by a 6-month washout period, and the remaining 30% for validation. All concepts were mapped to Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine–Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT). Results Our system consists of a polyhierarchical ontology containing 692 unique concepts, 2,118 synonyms, and 30,613 nonvisible descriptions to correct misspellings and nonstandard terminology. Our ontology successfully captured structured data for 95.9% of visits in our validation data set. Discussion and Conclusion We present the HierArchical Presenting Problem ontologY (HaPPy). This ontology was empirically derived and then iteratively validated by an expert consensus panel. HaPPy contains 692 presenting problem concepts, each concept being mapped to SNOMED CT. This freely sharable ontology can help to facilitate presenting problem-based quality metrics, research, and patient care.


Author(s):  
Dazhong Shen ◽  
Hengshu Zhu ◽  
Chen Zhu ◽  
Tong Xu ◽  
Chao Ma ◽  
...  

The job interview is considered as one of the most essential tasks in talent recruitment, which forms a bridge between candidates and employers in fitting the right person for the right job. While substantial efforts have been made on improving the job interview process, it is inevitable to have biased or inconsistent interview assessment due to the subjective nature of the traditional interview process. To this end, in this paper, we propose a novel approach to intelligent job interview assessment by learning the large-scale real-world interview data. Specifically, we develop a latent variable model named Joint Learning Model on Interview Assessment (JLMIA) to jointly model job description, candidate resume and interview assessment. JLMIA can effectively learn the representative perspectives of different job interview processes from the successful job application records in history. Therefore, a variety of applications in job interviews can be enabled, such as person-job fit and interview question recommendation. Extensive experiments conducted on real-world data clearly validate the effectiveness of JLMIA, which can lead to substantially less bias in job interviews and provide a valuable understanding of job interview assessment.


Author(s):  
I. A. Bagretsova ◽  
A. V. Sukharev ◽  
I. M. Barsukova

Introduction. The development of the system of emergency medical care in emergency department inevitably brings up issues of its availability and quality. Moreover, if the leading pathological syndrome resulting in the hospitalization and threating to the patient’s life deserves priority attention, so the accompanying pathology often remains in the shadow. Thus, venereal diseases, in particular, syphilis is epidemiologically dangerous disease as for the patients having this illness and for the patients surrounding them and the medical personnel carrying out the medical process. The objective of the study was to assess the current state of the problem of medical care for patients with venereal pathology in an emergency department.Material and methods. The material for the study was the data of medical records of patients in multispecialised emergency department of St. Petersburg for 4 years: 1088 – with positive serological reaction and 4500 – without dermatovenereal pathology (DVP).Results. By the results of the research, the diagnosis of syphilis was based only on the enzyme immunoassay test for syphilis and the diagnosis of syphilis remained unspecified; the efforts to prevent the spread of syphilis in emergency department were insufficient, did not allow carrying out appropriate preventive, therapeutic and diagnostic measures.Conclusion. Development of new models and principles of the organization of the diagnostic and treatment process, including the introduction of methods of express diagnosis in emergency department is required. 


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Zhang ◽  
Fan Lin ◽  
Fei Ma ◽  
Yuting Chen ◽  
Daowen Wang ◽  
...  

SummaryBackgroundWith the increasing demand for atrial fibrillation (AF) screening, clinicians spend a significant amount of time in identifying the AF signals from massive electrocardiogram (ECG) data in long-term dynamic ECG monitoring. In this study, we aim to reduce clinicians’ workload and promote AF screening by using artificial intelligence (AI) to automatically detect AF episodes and identify AF patients in 24 h Holter recording.MethodsWe used a total of 22 979 Holter recordings (24 h) from 22 757 adult patients and established accurate annotations for AF by cardiologists. First, a randomized clinical cohort of 3 000 recordings (1 500 AF and 1 500 non-AF) from 3000 patients recorded between April 2012 and May 2020 was collected and randomly divided into training, validation and test sets (10:1:4). Then, a deep-learning-based AI model was developed to automatically detect AF episode using RR intervals and was tested with the test set. Based on AF episode detection results, AF patients were automatically identified by using a criterion of at least one AF episode of 6 min or longer. Finally, the clinical effectiveness of the model was verified with an independent real-world test set including 19 979 recordings (1 006 AF and 18 973 non-AF) from 19 757 consecutive patients recorded between June 2020 and January 2021.FindingsOur model achieved high performance for AF episode detection in both test sets (sensitivity: 0.992 and 0.972; specificity: 0.997 and 0.997, respectively). It also achieved high performance for AF patient identification in both test sets (sensitivity:0.993 and 0.994; specificity: 0.990 and 0.973, respectively). Moreover, it obtained superior and consistent performance in an external public database.InterpretationOur AI model can automatically identify AF in long-term ECG recording with high accuracy. This cost-effective strategy may promote AF screening by improving diagnostic effectiveness and reducing clinical workload.Research in contextEvidence before this studyWe searched Google Scholar and PubMed for research articles on artificial intelligence-based diagnosis of atrial fibrillation (AF) published in English between Jan 1, 2016 and Aug 1, 2021, using the search terms “deep learning” OR “deep neural network” OR “machine learning” OR “artificial intelligence” AND “atrial fibrillation”. We found that most of the previous deep learning models in AF detection were trained and validated on benchmark datasets (such as the PhysioNet database, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beth Israel Hospital AF database or Long-Term AF database), in which there were less than 100 patients or the recordings contained only short ECG segments (30-60s). Our search did not identify any articles that explored deep neural networks for AF detection in large real-world dataset of 24 h Holter recording, nor did we find articles that can automatically identify patients with AF in 24 h Holter recording.Added value of this studyFirst, long-term Holter monitoring is the main method of AF screening, however, most previous studies of automatic AF detection mainly tested on short ECG recordings. This work focused on 24 h Holter recording data and achieved high accuracy in detecting AF episodes. Second, AF episodes detection did not automatically transform to AF patient identification in 24 h Holter recording, since at present, there is no well-recognized criterion for automatically identifying AF patient. Therefore, we established a criterion to identify AF patients by use of at least one AF episode of 6 min or longer, as this condition led to significantly increased risk of thromboembolism. Using this criterion, our method identified AF patients with high accuracy. Finally, and more importantly, our model was trained on a randomized clinical dataset and tested on an independent real-world clinical dataset to show great potential in clinical application. We did not exclude rare or special cases in the real-world dataset so as not to inflate our AF detection performance. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to automatically identifies both AF episodes and AF patients in 24 h Holter recording of large real-world clinical dataset.Implications of all the available evidenceOur deep learning model automatically identified AF patient with high accuracy in 24 h Holter recording and was verified in real-world data, therefore, it can be embedded into the Holter analysis system and deployed at the clinical level to assist the decision making of Holter analysis system and clinicians. This approach can help improve the efficiency of AF screening and reduce the cost for AF diagnosis. In addition, our RR-interval-based model achieved comparable or better performance than the raw-ECG-based method, and can be widely applied to medical devices that can collect heartbeat information, including not only the multi-lead and single-lead Holter devices, but also other wearable devices that can reliably measure the heartbeat signals.


Author(s):  
Ольга Фадеева ◽  
Olga Fadeeva

The paper reflects the state of the modern healthcare system and various enforcements of the right to medical care guaranteed by the Constitution of the Russian Federation. The right to health, as well as the provision of qualified, free, and timely health care, are among the most important and fundamental human rights. The paper also features some key enforcement problems concerning the right to health protection and medical care, guaranteed by Article 41 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation, e.g. a lack of medical personnel, untimely provision of the first aid, and insufficient financing in the health care system. The article also considers the causes and consequences of "staff shortages" in Russian hospitals, employment of medical graduates, and financial support of young medical specialists. The author analyzes the equipment status of medical organizations in 2018 and 2016, voices the problem of optimization in healthcare institutions by reducing the inpatient level and expanding outpatient clinics, and offers statistics of complaints to the Department of Public Health on quality and timeliness of medical care. The author believes that the enforcement of the right of citizens guaranteed by Article 41 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation can be characterized as very low, which indicates the pretentiousness of the law.


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